Laser Cooling and Trapping

Laser Cooling and Trapping by Harold J. Metcalf, published by Springer New York on November 9, 2001, is a comprehensive text that explores the innovative technique of laser cooling. This corrected edition spans 324 pages and is presented in English. The book delves into how laser cooling has enhanced our understanding of atomic behavior and confirmed key principles of quantum mechanics, including Bose-Einstein condensation. It serves as a resource for advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students with foundational knowledge in optics and quantum mechanics.
Readers will find a detailed examination of the electromagnetic interactions that facilitate the slowing and trapping of atoms and ions, utilizing both magnetic and optical traps. The text also covers a variety of applications, such as atomic clocks, collision processes, and the diffraction and interference of atomic beams in optical lattices. By integrating topics from physics, technology, and quantum theory, this book provides a valuable framework for studying individual atoms and clusters, as well as the physical properties of macromolecules like synthetic polymers and DNA.
Official synopsis Publisher
Laser cooling is a relatively new technique that has led to insights into the behavior of atoms as well as confirming with striking detail some of the fundamental notions of quantum mechanics, such as the condensation predicted by S.N. Bose. This elegant technique, whereby atoms, molecules, and even microscopic beads of glass, are trapped in small regions of free space by beams of light and subsequently moved at will using other beams, provides a useful research tool for the study of individual atoms and clusters of atoms, for investigating the details of chemical reactions, and even for determining the physical properties of individual macromolecules such as synthetic polymers and DNA. Intended for advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students who have some basic knowledge of optics and quantum mechanics, this text begins with a review of the relevant results of quantum mechanics, it then turns to the electromagnetic interactions involved in slowing and trapping atoms and ions, in both magnetic and optical traps. The concluding chapters discuss a broad range of applications, from atomic clocks and studies of collision processes to diffraction and interference of atomic beams at optical lattices and Bose-Einstein condensation.
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