Diffraction of a CW atom laser in the Raman-Nath regime
Abstract
Atom interferometry is the most successful technique for precision metrology. However, current interferometers using ultracold atoms allows one to probe the interference pattern only momentarily and has finite duty cycle, resulting in an aliasing effect and a low-bandwidth measurement -- also known as Dick effect. Interferometry with a continuous-wave atom laser shows promise in overcoming these limitations due a continuous monitoring of the interference pattern. In this work, we demonstrate a key step towards such an interferometry by demonstrating a diffraction of an `atom laser' in the Raman-Nath regime. We outcouple a continuous beam of coherent atoms from a reservoir of 87Rb Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) upto 400 ms. The `atom laser' interacts with a grating formed by a standing wave of a far detuned laser light. The atom laser diffracts into several orders going up to 9th order or up to momenta of 18\ k. We have characterized the diffraction of atom laser for different conditions and the results match with numerical simulations. Such atom laser will allow for construction of an atom-interferometer to probe physics phenomenon continuously up to a time of the order of few hundred millisecond.
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