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Dive into the research topics where Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez is active.

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Featured researches published by Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez.


Physical Review A | 2010

Ion dynamics in a linear radio-frequency trap with a single cooling laser

Mathieu Marciante; Caroline Champenois; A. Calisti; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Martina Knoop

We analyse the possibility of cooling ions with a single laser beam, due to the coupling between the three components of their motion induced by the Coulomb interaction. For this purpose, we numerically study the dynamics of ion clouds of up to 140 particles, trapped in a linear quadrupole potential and cooled with a laser beam propagating in the radial plane. We use Molecular Dynamics simulations and model the laser cooling by a stochastic process. For each component of the motion, we systematically study the dependence of the temperature with the anisotropy of the trapping potential. Results obtained using the full radio-frequency (rf) potential are compared to those of the corresponding pseudo-potential. In the rf case, the rotation symmetry of the potential has to be broken to keep ions inside the trap. Then, as for the pseudo-potential case, we show that the efficiency of the Coulomb coupling to thermalize the components of motion depends on the geometrical configuration of the cloud. Coulomb coupling appears to be not efficient when the ions organise as a line or a pancake and the three components of motion reach the same temperature only if the cloud extends in three dimensions.


Physical Review A | 2011

Parallel ion strings in linear multipole traps

Mathieu Marciante; Caroline Champenois; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; A. Calisti; Martina Knoop

Additional radio-frequency (rf) potentials applied to linear multipole traps create extra field nodes in the radial plane which allow one to confine single ions, or strings of ions, in totally rf field-free regions. The number of nodes depends on the order of the applied multipole potentials and their relative distance can be easily tuned by the amplitude variation of the applied voltages. Simulations using molecular dynamics show that strings of ions can be laser cooled down to the Doppler limit in all directions of space. Once cooled, organized systems can be moved with very limited heating, even if the cooling process is turned off.


arXiv: Atomic Physics | 2013

A double ion trap for large Coulomb crystals

Caroline Champenois; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Mathieu Marciante; Didier Guyomarc'H; Marie Houssin; Martina Knoop

While the linear radiofrequency trap finds various applications in high-precision spectroscopy and quantum information, its higher-order cousin, the linear multipole trap, is almost exclusively employed in physical chemistry. Recently, first experiments have shown interesting features by laser-cooling multipole-trapped ion clouds. Multipole traps show a flatter potential in their centre and therefore a modified density distribution compared to quadrupole traps. Micromotion is an important issue and will certainly influence the dynamics of crystallized ion structures. Our experiment tends to investigate possible crystallization processes in the multipole. In a more general way, we are interested in the study of the dynamics and thermodynamics of large ion clouds in traps of different geometry.


Physical Review A | 2015

Fast and efficient transport of large ion clouds

Marius Romuald Kamsap; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Caroline Champenois; Didier Guyomarc'H; Marie Houssin; Martina Knoop

The manipulation of trapped charged particles by electric fields is an accurate, robust and reliable technique for many applications or experiments in high-precision spectroscopy. The transfer of the ion sample between multiple traps allows the use of a tailored environment in quantum information, cold chemistry, or frequency metrology experiments. In this article, we experimentally study the transport of ion clouds of up to 50 000 ions. The design of the trap makes ions very sensitive to any mismatch between the assumed electric potential and the actual local one. Nevertheless, we show that being fast (100 µs to transfer over more than 20 mm) increases the transport efficiency to values higher than 90 %, even with a large number of ions. For clouds of less than 2000 ions, a 100 % transfer efficiency is observed.


Journal of Physics B | 2013

Coherent internal state transfer by a three-photon STIRAP-like scheme for many-atom samples

Marius Romuald Kamsap; Thierry Blanchard Ekogo; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Gaetan Hagel; Marie Houssin; Olivier Morizot; Martina Knoop; Caroline Champenois

A STIRAP-like scheme is proposed to exploit a three-photon resonance taking place in alkaline-earth-metal ions. This scheme is designed for state transfer between the two fine structure components of the metastable D-state which are two excited states that can serve as optical or THz qu-bit. The advantage of a coherent three-photon process compared to two-photon STIRAP lies in the possibility of exact cancellation of the first order Doppler shift which opens the way for an application to a sample composed of many ions. The transfer efficiency and its dependence with experimental parameters are analyzed by numerical simulations. This efficiency is shown to reach a fidelity as high as


Physical Review A | 2017

Experimental demonstration of an efficient number diagnostic for long ion chains

Marius Romuald Kamsap; Caroline Champenois; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Simon Mahler; Marie Houssin; Martina Knoop

(1-8.10^{-5})


EPL | 2015

Fast accumulation of ions in a dual trap

Marius Romuald Kamsap; Caroline Champenois; Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Marie Houssin; Martina Knoop

with realistic parameters. The scheme is also extended to the synthesis of a linear combination of three stable or metastable states.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2018

Symmetry breaking in linear multipole traps

Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Caroline Champenois; Marius Romuald Kamsap; Gaetan Hagel; Marie Houssin; Martina Knoop

Very long, one-dimensional (1D) ion chains are the basis for many applications, in particular in quantum information processing and reliable diagnostics are needed to quantify them. To that purpose, we have experimentally validated Dubins model for very long ion chains [Phys. Rev. Lett. 71, 2753 (1993)]. This diagnostic allows to precisely determine the number of trapped ion with an accuracy of almost 1% without counting them, by measuring the ion-ion distance of the innermost particles, as well as the trapping potential along the ion chain direction. In our experiment, based on a 155 ion chain, the central 30 ions are measured to be equidistant to better than 2%, and we can determine the total number of trapped ions with a 4.5% uncertainty, completely dominated by a conservative estimation of the experimental characterisation of the trap.


European Physical Journal Plus | 2014

Computer-controlled high-precision Michelson wavemeter

Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; M Vedel; Caroline Champenois; Martina Knoop

Transporting charged particles between different traps has become an important feature in high-precision spectroscopy experiments of different types. In many experiments in atomic and molecular physics, the optical probing of the ions is not carried out at the same location as the creation or state preparation. In our double linear radio-frequency trap, we have implemented a fast protocol allowing to shuttle large ion clouds very efficiently between traps, in times shorter than a millisecond. Moreover, our shuttling protocol is a one-way process, allowing to add ions to an existing cloud without loss of the already trapped sample. This feature makes accumulation possible, resulting in the creation of large ion clouds. Experimental results show that ion clouds of large size are reached with laser cooling; however, the described mechanism does not rely on any cooling process.


Physical Review A | 2014

Ion transport in macroscopic RF linear traps

Jofre Pedregosa-Gutierrez; Caroline Champenois; Marius Romuald Kamsap; Martina Knoop

Abstract Radiofrequency multipole traps have been used for some decades in cold collision experiments and are gaining interest for precision spectroscopy due to their low micromotion contribution and the predicted unusual cold-ion structures. However, the experimental realisation is not yet fully controlled, and open questions in the operation of these devices remain. We present experimental observations of symmetry breaking of the trapping potential in a macroscopic octupole trap with laser-cooled ions. Numerical simulations have been performed in order to explain the appearance of additional local potential minima and be able to control them in a next step. We characterise these additional potential minima, in particular with respect to their position, their potential depth and their probability of population as a function of the radial and angular displacement of the trapping rods.

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Martina Knoop

Aix-Marseille University

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A. Calisti

Aix-Marseille University

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M Vedel

Aix-Marseille University

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