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Engineering and Control of Cold Molecules

Engineering and Control of Cold Molecules. Molecule. N. P. Bigelow University of Rochester. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ?. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ?. Talks from: Shlyapnikov Pfau Burnett Sengstock. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ?. Talks from: Shlyapnikov Pfau Burnett Sengstock .

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Engineering and Control of Cold Molecules

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  1. Engineering and Control of Cold Molecules Molecule N. P. Bigelow University of Rochester

  2. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ?

  3. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ? Talks from: Shlyapnikov Pfau Burnett Sengstock . . .

  4. Why Cold (Polar) Molecules ? Talks from: Shlyapnikov Pfau Burnett Sengstock . . . More Reasons Later in Talk

  5. So what about cold molecules? Hard to find cycling transitions  Laser cooling of molecules is hard if not impossible

  6. Doyle approach - Thermalization with cold helium gas & magnetic trapping Dilution Refrigerator ~mK Paramagnetic molecules Large samples

  7. Meijer - time and spatially varying E fields – decelerator – (à la high-energy in reverse; H. Gould) accelerate

  8. Meijer - decelerator (à la high-energy; H. Gould) decelerate

  9. Here “Build” the molecules from a gas of pre-cooled atoms via photoassociation

  10. A Quick Review ofPhotoassociationStarting with Homonuclears

  11. Molecular potentials Homonuclear Singly excited state Ground state

  12. Photoassociation Singly excited state photon Ground state 600-1000Å

  13. Ground state molecule formation? Excited state photon Sp. emission Ground state

  14. (transition rate) (collision rate& pair distribution)* (excitation rate)* (survival rate)*(process probability)* (density2)*(volume) These factors determine molecular production rates

  15. Ground state molecule formation Poor Franck-Condon factors are discouraging  f  i   0 i  photon Sp. emission f 

  16. In 1997 Pierre Pillet and co-workers startled the community by showing the Cs2 ground-state molecules were produced in a conventional optical trap

  17. R-transfer method Frank-Condon Matching

  18. Why not heteronuclear molecules?

  19. Molecular potentials Far better Franck-Condon factors…. Singly excited state Ground state

  20. We might be CLOBBERED by the pair distribution function Rhomo/Rhetero = 950/76 ~ 13 (Rhomo/Rhetero = 950/76 ~ 1/10)2 ~ 100 ! The interaction time is also smaller by a factor of ~ 13!

  21. Nevertheless, several groups built multi-species MOTs - including Rochester and Sao Carlos and

  22. Kasevich Arimondo Ingusio Weidemuller Windholz DeMille Stwalley/Gould Wang/Buell Ruff others Bose-Fermi&Isotopic: Jin, Salamon, Ertmer, Ketterle, Hulet, Sengstock… Sukenik NaCs NaK NaRb RbCs KRb LiCs LiNa ? Most “reactive”

  23. We started with Na + Cs

  24. Search for ground state molecules - the detection pathway 20-200 J 9ns 580-589 nm 2 mm2

  25. NaCs formation and detection Traps 9ns 100J pulse @ 575-600nm time (s) -30 0 20 105

  26. Choice of pulsed laser wavelength 575-600 nm was chosen • To implement a resonant ionization pathway • It has enough energy to 2-photon ionize NaCs  It will NOT resonantly ionize Cs

  27. Na+Cs Lin Scale Zoom Time of Flight photons cold Na Cold Cs Cold NaCs Thermal Na Na2 Cs2

  28. Is NaCs formed by the ionizing pulse ? Traps Na-push beam 9ns Ionizing Pulse time (s) -30 -15 0 20 105

  29. Push –beam experiment

  30. How cold are the molecules? We use time-of-flight from the interaction zone as our probe

  31. NaCs Temp TNaCs ~ 260 K 0.2 m/s (kinetic temp)

  32. KNaCs : The rate of formation • We detect 500 molecules in 10,000 pulses • Estimate ionization and detection efficiency ~ 10% • Kinetic model : 90% of NaCs drifts out of the trapping region between pulses. Production rate ~ 50 Hz   d [NaCs] / dt = KNaCs [Na][Cs] KNaCs ~ 7.4 x 10-15 cm3 s-1 

  33. Measured depth of the triplet is 137-247 cm-1 Neumann & Pauly Phys. Rev. Lett.20, 357-359 (1968). and J. Chem. Phys.52, 2548-2555 (1970) We have scanned 0 – 268 cm-1 and found strong ion signals (includes 5% of singlet potential) We have a mixture of singlets and triplets C. Haimberger, J. Kleinert, npb PRA Rapid Comm. 70, 021402 (R) Aug 2004 NaCs has largest polarizability (measured) of all bi-alkalis

  34. Coherent Transfer - State Selective Ro-vibrational ground state (lower dipole moment) or Single excited ro-vibrational state Incoherent transfer results already at Yale

  35. The most important part of this part of our work: C. Haimberger J. Kleinert (M. Bhattacharya, J. Shaffer & W. Chalupczak)

  36. KRb

  37. RbCs

  38. KRb 40,000 molecules/sec !!

  39. Franck-Condon Factors for hetero-pairs based on long range (dispersion) potentials Wang & Stwalley, J. Chem Phys.

  40. Cold (Polar) Moleculesand Quantum Information

  41. Heteronuclear molecules are highly polarizable The dipole-dipole coupling of the molecules can be harnessed for quantum information applications (see protocols for EDMs in Quantum Dots - e.g. Barenco, et al PRL 82 1060) Polar Molecules Allow Coupling Enabling Quantum Information Applications

  42. atoms bound molecular states Polar Molecules Allow Couplings Enabling Quantum Information Applications(based on scheme by Côté, Yellin [Lukin])

  43. atoms bound molecular states Polar Molecules Allow Coupling Enabling Quantum Information Applications • Start with two molecules in same state

  44. atoms bound molecular states Polar Molecules Allow Coupling Enabling Quantum Information Applications • Start with two molecules in same state • Use Raman pulses - create superposition

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