Optically trapped atom transfer tweezer through hologram and method using the same
10409220 ยท 2019-09-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G03H2226/11
PHYSICS
G03H1/2294
PHYSICS
G03H1/08
PHYSICS
G03H2001/0077
PHYSICS
International classification
G03H1/08
PHYSICS
G03H1/22
PHYSICS
Abstract
An optically trapped atom transfer tweezer includes an optical modulator which modulates incident light and generates a first hologram; a first lens which images the first hologram on an intermediate image plane and generates a first holographic image having any potential shape; a second lens which re-images the first holographic image on an entrance pupil of a third lens; the third lens which re-images a second hologram generated by the re-imaging of the second lens on a plane where an optically trapped atom array exists; a photographing device which captures optically trapped cold atoms from a second holographic image generated on the plane where an optically trapped atom array exists; and a controller which controls the optical modulator to adjust the second holographic image on the basis of the optically trapped atom image captured by the photographing device such that the optically trapped atom array is transferred to any spatial position.
Claims
1. An optically trapped atom transfer tweezer comprising: an optical modulator configured to modulate incident light and to generate a first hologram; a first lens configured to image the first hologram on an intermediate image plane and to generate a first holographic image having any potential shape; a second lens configured to re-image the first holographic image on an entrance pupil of a third lens; the third lens configured to re-image a second hologram generated by the re-imaging of the second lens on a plane where an optically trapped atom array exists; a photographing device configured to capture optically trapped cold atoms from a second holographic image generated on the plane where the optically trapped atom array exists; and a controller configured to control the optical modulator to adjust the second holographic image on a basis of an optically trapped atom image captured by the photographing device such that the optically trapped atom array is transferred to any spatial position.
2. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein the photographing device is an electron multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD).
3. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein the optical modulator is a liquid crystal spatial light modulator (LCSLM).
4. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein the optical modulator is comprised of an array of 19201080 pixels, each of which has a size of 8 m.sup.2.
5. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein a focal length of the first lens and a focal length of the second lens is 200 mm.
6. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein the third lens is an objective lens having a focal length of 4 mm.
7. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein the second holographic image has a beam radius .sub.o of 1.14 m, a trap depth U of 1.4 mK, and an optical power P.sub.0 of 3.4 mW.
8. A method for transferring optically trapped atoms, the method comprising: modulating incident light and generating a first hologram; imaging, with a first lens, the first hologram on an intermediate image plane and generating a first holographic image having any potential shape; first re-imaging, with a second lens, the first holographic image; second re-imaging, with a third lens, a second hologram generated by the first re-imaging on a plane where an optically trapped atom array exists; and capturing optically trapped cold atoms from a second holographic image generated on the plane where the optically trapped atom array exists.
9. The method of claim 8, further comprising adjusting the second holographic image on a basis of an optically trapped atom image generated by the capturing.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the second holographic image has a beam radius .sub.o of 1.14 m, a trap depth U of 1.4 mK, and an optical power P.sub.0 of 3.4 mW.
11. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein a focal length of the first lens is greater than a focal length of the third lens.
12. The optically trapped atom transfer tweezer of claim 1, wherein a focal length of the second lens is greater than a focal length of the third lens.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) The following detailed description of the present invention shows a specified embodiment of the present invention and will be provided with reference to the accompanying drawings. The embodiment will be described in enough detail that those skilled in the art are able to embody the present invention. It should be understood that various embodiments of the present invention are different from each other and need not be mutually exclusive. For example, a specific shape, structure and properties, which are described in this disclosure, may be implemented in other embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention with respect to one embodiment.
(9) Also, it should be noted that positions or placements of individual components within each disclosed embodiment may be changed without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Therefore, the following detailed description is not intended to be limited. If adequately described, the scope of the present invention is limited only by the appended claims of the present invention as well as all equivalents thereto. Similar reference numerals in the drawings designate the same or similar functions in many aspects.
(10) Hereinafter, the embodiment of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
(11) Specifically, Fig. la shows an optical image of an optically trapped atom array formed by an optically trapped atom transfer tweezer according to the embodiment of the present invention. Through a comparison of a first frame (Hologram 1) and a second frame (Hologram 2) of
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(13) Meanwhile,
(14) A holographic optical tweezer has been known to be unable to sustain the optically trapped atoms while the hologram is being updated. The intensity flicker has been pointed out as a reason for that. Although an individual hologram generated by iterative Fourier transformation algorithms (IFTA) generates a required optical potential, it is not guaranteed that the frame-to-frame evolution maintains a proper in-between potential (see
(15) Even with a fast device such as a digital micromirror device (DMD, 50 kHz frame), a large portion of the trapped atoms get lost. The trap loss simulation which is performed as a function of trap frequency .sub.r={square root over (4Uhno.sub.1.sup.2)} where, m is single atom mass and f is a frame rate of the device, shows that the intensity flickering hinders the trap stability (see
(16) In particular, a constant portion of loss exists in an adiabatic region (f.sub.r>>f, region {circle around (1)} in
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(18) The photographing device 100 may be an electron multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD). The EMCCD is a recording device which uses accumulation and transfer of electric charges and has a function to capture a below-described holographic image.
(19) The optical modulator 200 may be a liquid crystal spatial light modulator (LCSLM) and corresponds to a holographic device. The optical modulator 200 is comprised of a reflective phase modulator array of 19201080 pixels. Each pixel may have a size of 8 m.sup.2 and may have a first order diffraction efficiency equal to or less than 50%. However, there is no limitation to this.
(20) A diffracted beam from the spatial light modulators (SLM) is imaged onto an intermediate image by a first lens L1 having a focal length F.sub.1 of 200 mm, and then is re-imaged onto a focal plane of an objective lens L3 by a second lens having a focal length F.sub.2 of 200 mm. The given 2F.sub.1-2F.sub.2 geometry from the SLM efficiently transfers the holograms to a final image plane in an experimental chamber.
(21) The objective lens L3 may have a focal length F.sub.3 of 4 mm, numerical aperture (NA) of 0.5, and a long working distance of 16 mm with 3.5 mm-thick glass-plate compensation. However, there is no limitation to this.
(22) The optical tweezers produced on the final image plane may have a beam radius .sub.o of 1.14 m, a trap depth U of 1.4 mK, and an optical power P.sub.0 of 3.4 mW per tweezer. When a given laser power of 1.1 W is able to sustain up to nine optical tweezers in consideration of loss of the optical path and the efficiency of a random division algorithm.
(23) Referring back to
(24) The area of optical modulator 200 of
(25) In the simulation, nine atoms are transferred by using the hologram finally generated through the third lens L3. This is shown in
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(27) Specifically,
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(31) P_lim shown in
(32) The features, structures and effects and the like described in the embodiments are included in at least one embodiment of the present invention and are not necessarily limited to one embodiment. Furthermore, the features, structures, effects and the like provided in each embodiment can be combined or modified in other embodiments by those skilled in the art to which the embodiments belong. Therefore, contents related to the combination and modification should be construed to be included in the scope of the present invention.
(33) Although embodiments of the present invention were described above, these are just examples and do not limit the present invention. Further, the present invention may be changed and modified in various ways, without departing from the essential features of the present invention, by those skilled in the art. For example, the components described in detail in the embodiments of the present invention may be modified. Further, differences due to the modification and application should be construed as being included in the scope and spirit of the present invention, which is described in the accompanying claims.