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Phys. Rev. A 62, 043605 (2000) [12 pages]

Atom loss and the formation of a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate by Feshbach resonance

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V. A. Yurovsky and A. Ben-Reuven
School of Chemistry, Tel Aviv University, 69978 Tel Aviv, Israel

P. S. Julienne and C. J. Williams
Atomic Physics Division, Stop 8423, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20889

Received 25 May 2000; published 13 September 2000

In experiments conducted recently at MIT on Na Bose-Einstein condensates [S. Inouye et al., Nature (London) 392, 151 (1998); J. Stenger et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 2422 (1999)], large loss rates were observed when a time-varying magnetic field was used to tune a molecular Feshbach resonance state near the state of a pair of atoms in the condensate. A collisional deactivation mechanism affecting a temporarily formed molecular condensate [see V. A. Yurovsky, A. Ben-Reuven, P. S. Julienne and C. J. Williams, Phys. Rev. A 60, R765 (1999)], studied here in more detail, accounts for the results of the slow-sweep experiments. A best fit to the MIT data yields a rate coefficient for deactivating atom-molecule collisions of 1.6×10-10cm3/s. In the case of the fast-sweep experiment, a study is carried out of the combined effect of two competing mechanisms, the three-atom (atom-molecule) or four-atom (molecule-molecule) collisional deactivation versus a process of two-atom trap-state excitation by curve crossing [F. H. Mies, P. S. Julienne, and E. Tiesinga, Phys. Rev. A 61, 022721 (2000)]. It is shown that both mechanisms contribute to the loss comparably and nonadditively.

© 2000 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.62.043605
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.62.043605
PACS:
03.75.Fi, 32.80.Pj, 32.60.+i, 34.50.Ez