We investigate the frequency-comb-induced radiation pressure force acting on a cloud of cold
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atoms. Reduction and spectral broadening of the frequency comb force are observed as the cloud’s optical thickness is increased. Since the radiation pressure force is uniquely determined by light scattered by an atomic cloud, we discuss different scattering mechanisms and point to the shadow effect as the dominant mechanism affecting the FC-induced force in resonantly excited dense atomic clouds. Our results improve the understanding of the interaction of frequency comb light with many-atom ensembles, which is essential for novel frequency comb applications in simultaneous multispecies cooling and self-ordering, multimode quantum memories, and quantum computing.
At some point in the future, if mankind hopes to settle planets outside the Solar System, it will be crucial to determine the range of planetary conditions under which human beings could survive and function. In this article, we apply physical considerations to future exoplanetary biology to determine the limitations which gravity imposes on several systems governing the human body.Initially, we examine the ultimate limits at which the human skeleton breaks and muscles become unable to lift the body from the ground. We also produce a new model for the energetic expenditure of walking, by modelling the leg as an inverted pendulum. Both approaches conclude that, with rigorous training, humans could perform normal locomotion at gravity no higher than 4 g Earth .To be published in The Physics Teacher.
We study the electromagnetically induced transparency of a single frequency comb mode interacting with a cold rubidium cloud. A A hyperfine level structure in a D2 transition is used in the configuration of co-propagated probe (frequency comb) and coupling (continuous-wave) laser fields. The experimental results are satisfactorily reproduced by the developed theoretical models.
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