Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
Motivation
As explained in Chapter 2, the Lévy statistics treatment of subrecoil laser cooling has been introduced after a series of simplifications, where we have dropped details of the quantum microscopic description to only keep the main features of the physical process. Such a way of reasoning is standard in statistical physics. It is difficult, however, to be sure a priori that one has not dropped important features, and the validity of the statistical approach needs to be checked. An important step of this verification, although not a rigorous proof, is to compare a posteriori the predictions of the statistical approach with experimental results as well as with the predictions of microscopic theoretical approaches. This chapter presents such comparisons.
We present in Section 8.2 the approaches (theoretical and experimental) to which our statistical approach can be compared. We then proceed to compare the results obtained by the different approaches. First, in Section 8.3, we treat in detail the predictions for a global quantity, the proportion of trapped atoms. This is done for the three recycling models introduced in this work, in the one-dimensional case. Then, in Section 8.4, we study another physical quantity with a richer content, the momentum distribution of cooled atoms. In Section 8.5, we investigate the influence of the dimensionality of the problem, and the role of friction during the recycling periods – which are crucial predictions of the Lévy statistics analysis.
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