Ultracold plasmas : phenomena and applications

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Abstract

Ultracold plasmas (UCPs) represent a marriage between the seemingly distinct fields of cold atom physics and plasma physics. In cold atom physics, dilute clouds of atoms can be trapped with laser radiation and cooled to J.1Ktemperatures. In contrast, in plasma physics the constituents generally have temperatures in the 1,000K-1O,000K range as well as much higher density. In 1999,Rolston and co-workers [1] first converted a cloud of laser-cooled atoms into a plasma by photo-ionizing the atoms just above threshold. This provides very unusual circumstances:the temperature of ions and neutrals is O.OOIK,that of electrons 10K! Such ultra-cold plasmas therefore are interesting subjects for fundamentalplasma physics studies. In a recent paper [2], we argued that ultracold plasmas (UCPs) may in addition provide an entirely new way of generatinghigh-brightnesscharged-particlebeams, such as used in focused-ion beams, laser synchrotrons, and ultra-fast electron microscopy. Here, a low temperature T is beneficial for the intrinsic (transverse) brightness B of a source since B = II(A1), where I is the current and A the cross-sectional area. I will discuss an experimental investigation of the properties of ion and electron beams extracted from ultracold plasmas, which shows that such beams indeed have low temperatures, and, as a result, high angular intensity.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 9th Euregional Workshop on the Exploration of Low Temperature Plasma Physics (WELTPP-9 2006), 23-24 November, 2006, Kerkrade, The Netherlands
Place of PublicationKerkrade, The Netherlands
PagesO10-
Publication statusPublished - 2006
Event9th Euregional Workshop on the Exploration of Low Temperature Plasma Physics (WELTPP-9), November 23-24, 2006, Kerkrade, The Netherlands - Conference centre "Rolduc", Kerkrade, Netherlands
Duration: 23 Nov 200624 Nov 2006

Workshop

Workshop9th Euregional Workshop on the Exploration of Low Temperature Plasma Physics (WELTPP-9), November 23-24, 2006, Kerkrade, The Netherlands
Abbreviated titleWELTPP-9
Country/TerritoryNetherlands
CityKerkrade
Period23/11/0624/11/06

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