Phase-space study of surface-electrode Paul traps: Integrable, chaotic, and mixed motions

V. Roberdel, D. Leibfried, D. Ullmo, H. Landa

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

We present a comprehensive phase-space treatment of the motion of charged particles in electrodynamic traps. Focusing on five-wire surface-electrode Paul traps, we study the details of integrable and chaotic motion of a single ion. We introduce appropriate phase-space measures and give a universal characterization of the trap effectiveness as a function of the parameters. We rigorously derive the commonly used (time-independent) pseudopotential approximation, quantify its regime of validity, and analyze the mechanism of its breakdown within the time-dependent potential. The phase-space approach that we develop gives a general framework for describing ion dynamics in a broad variety of surface Paul traps. To probe this framework experimentally, we propose and analyze, using numerical simulations, an experiment that can be realized with an existing four-wire trap. We predict a robust experimental signature of the existence of trapping pockets within a mixed regular and chaotic phase-space structure. Intricately rich escape dynamics suggest that surface traps give access to exploring microscopic Hamiltonian transport phenomena in phase space.
Original languageEnglish
Article number053419
JournalPhysical Review A
Volume97
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 May 2018
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We thank Ananyo Maitra for very helpful advice on the manuscript. H.L. thanks Giovanna Morigi, Alex Retzker, and Roni Geffen for fruitful discussions. H.L. acknowledges support by the French government via the 2013–2014 Chateaubriand fellowship of the French embassy in Israel, support by a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship within the Seventh European Community Framework Program, and support by IRS-IQUPS of Université Paris-Saclay.

FundersFunder number
French Government
Seventh European Community Framework Program
Université Paris-Saclay

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