Neutral Atom Imaging Using a Pulsed Electromagnetic Lens

£89.50

Neutral Atom Imaging Using a Pulsed Electromagnetic Lens

Nanosciences Condensed matter physics (liquid state and solid state physics) Laser physics Atomic and molecular physics Spectrum analysis, spectrochemistry, mass spectrometry

Author: Jamie Ryan Gardner

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Collection: Springer Theses

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 30th October 2017

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9783319684307


Book Description

This book describes the design, construction, and characterization of a new type of aberration-corrected, neutral-atom lens. Atom beam control plays a crucial role in many different fields, ranging from fundamental physics research and materials science to applied nanotechnology. Despite this, atom-optical elements like lenses and mirrors remain relatively underdeveloped compared to their counterparts in other optics fields. Although aberration correction is addressed quite comprehensively in photon and electron lenses, no credible research efforts have yet produced the same technology for neutral atoms.

Progress and Applications

It reports on progress towards a neutral atom imaging device that will be useful in a range of applications, including nanofabrication and surface microscopy. It presents a novel technique for improving refractive power and correcting chromatic aberration in atom lenses based on a fundamental paradigm shift from continuous, two-dimensional focusing to a pulsed, three-dimensional approach. Simulations of this system suggest that it will pave the way towards the long-sought goal of true atom imaging on the nanoscale. The book further describes the construction of a prototype lens, and shows that all of the technological requirements for the proposed system are easily satisfied. Using metastable neon from a supersonic source, the prototype was characterized for three different focal lengths and a diverse range of apertures. Despite some manufacturing imperfections, lower distortion and higher resolution than has been shown in any previous hexapole lens was observed. Comparison with simulations corroborates the underlying theory and encourages further refinement of the process.

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