Abstract
We give a full quantum treatment of the radiative heating mechanism which arises in atomic clouds at low temperatures due to the collisions in the presence of a light field. The time scale of these collisions is comparable to the time scale of spontaneous decay, hence one needs to combine excitation and decay processes with the quantum motion of the colliding atoms into a single model, which we have done. Our study produces a statistical approximate to the full density matrix by combining wave-packet dynamics with the Monte Carlo state-vector method. We also present a quantitative semiclassical treatment based on the Landau-Zener model, and show that it agrees with the quantal results in certain parameter regimes. However, for low temperatures and strong laser fields the full quantum treatment is needed. We describe our numerical procedures and the statistical aspects of the Monte Carlo state-vector method in detail. Our main result is that the low-energy collisions can produce appreciable heating of the cloud.
- Received 10 December 1993
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.50.1513
©1994 American Physical Society