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NASA’s Cold Atom Lab: System Development and Ground Test Status

A wide-angle view from inside the International Space Station's Cupola, looking out at Earth and parts of the station. The curved windows frame a stunning view of Earth's blue atmosphere and clouds, with the dark expanse of space above. In the upper center, a robotic arm extends, holding a cylindrical module with two golden, circular solar arrays deployed, reflecting the sunlight. The interior of the Cupola, with its many handrails, lights, and panels, is visible in the foreground, creating a sense of being aboard the orbiting laboratory.

We report the status of the Cold Atom Lab instrument to be operated aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Utilizing a compact atom chip-based system to create ultracold mixtures and degenerate samples of 87Rb, 39K, and 41K, the Cold Atom Lab is a multi-user facility developed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory to provide the first persistent quantum gas platform in the microgravity conditions of space. Within this unique environment, atom traps can be decompressed to arbitrarily weak confining potentials, producing a new regime of picokelvin temperatures and ultra-low densities. Further, the complete removal of these confining potential allows the free fall evolution of ultracold clouds to be observed on unprecedented timescales compared to earthbound instruments. This unique facility will enable novel ultracold atom research to be remotely performed by an international group of principle investigators with broad applications in fundamental physics and inertial sensing. Here, we describe the development and validation of critical Cold Atom Lab technologies, including demonstration of the first on-chip Bose–Einstein condensation (BEC) of 87Rb with microwave-based evaporation and the generation of ultracold dual-species quantum gas mixtures of 39K/87Rb and 41K/87Rb in an atom chip trap via sympathetic cooling.

Read the full paper at nature.com

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