Phys. Rev. A 72, 043406 (2005) [7 pages]Focusing a fountain of neutral cesium atoms with an electrostatic lens triplet
Juris G. Kalnins *, Jason M. Amini †, and Harvey Gould ‡ Received 1 March 2005; published 26 October 2005 An electrostatic lens with three focusing elements in an alternating-gradient configuration is used to focus a fountain of cesium atoms in their ground (strong-field-seeking) state. The lens electrodes are shaped to produce only sextupole plus dipole equipotentials which avoids adding the unnecessary nonlinear forces present in cylindrical lenses. Defocusing between lenses is greatly reduced by having all of the main electric fields point in the same direction and be of nearly equal magnitude. The addition of the third lens gave us better control of the focusing strength in the two transverse planes and allowed focusing of the beam to half the image size in both planes. The beam envelope was calculated for lens voltages selected to produced specific focusing properties. The calculations, starting from first principles, were compared with measured beam sizes and found to be in good agreement. Application to fountain experiments, atomic clocks, and focusing polar molecules in strong-field-seeking states is discussed. ©2005 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.72.043406
*
Electronic address: jgkalnins@lbl.gov
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