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We have developed and characterized an atom-guiding technique that loads $3times10^6$ cold rubidium atoms into hollow-core optical fibre, an order-of-magnitude larger than previously reported results. This result was possible because it was guided by a physically realistic simulation that could provide the specifications for loading efficiencies of 3% and a peak optical depth of 600. The simulation further showed that the demonstrated loading efficiency is limited solely by the geometric overlap of the atom cloud and the optical guide beam, and is thus open to further improvement with experimental modification. The experimental arrangement allows observation of the real-time effects of light-assisted cold atom collisions and background gas collisions by tracking the dynamics of the cold atom cloud as it falls into the fibre. The combination of these observations, and physical understanding from the simulation, allows estimation of the limits to loading cold atoms into hollow-core fibres.
We demonstrate the production of micron-sized high density atom clouds of interest for meso- scopic quantum information processing. We evaporate atoms from 60 microK, 3x10^14 atoms/cm^3 samples contained in a highly anisotropic optical lattice formed
We demonstrate the production of high density cold atom samples (2e14 atoms/cc) in a simple optical lattice formed with YAG light that is diffracted from a holographic phase plate. A loading protocol is described that results in 10,000 atoms per latt
In this article we describe the design, construction and implementation of our ion-atom hybrid system incorporating a high resolution time of flight mass spectrometer (TOFMS). Potassium atoms ($^{39}$K) in a Magneto Optical Trap (MOT) and laser coole
The research on cold-atom interferometers gathers a large community of about 50 groups worldwide both in the academic and now in the industrial sectors. The interest in this sub-field of quantum sensing and metrology lies in the large panel of possib
We present an experimental and theoretical study of atom-molecule collisions in a mixture of cold, trapped atomic nitrogen and NH molecules at a temperature of $sim 600$~mK. We measure a small N+NH trap loss rate coefficient of $k^{(mathrm{N+NH})}_ma