Cruising through molecular bound-state manifolds with radiofrequency

Author:  ["F. Lang","P. v. d. Straten","B. Brandstätter","G. Thalhammer","K. Winkler","P. S. Julienne","R. Grimm","J. Hecker Denschlag"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Physics

Abstract

The production of ultracold molecules with their rich internal structure is currently attracting considerable interest1,2,3,4. For future experiments, it will be important to efficiently transfer these molecules from their initial internal quantum state at production to other quantum states of interest. Transfer tools such as optical Raman schemes5,6, radiofrequency transitions (see, for example, ref. 7) or magnetic field ramping8,9 exist, but are either technically involved or limited in their applicability. Here, we demonstrate a simple, highly efficient hybrid transfer method that overcomes a number of the previous limitations. The scheme is based on magnetically tuned mixing of two neighbouring molecular levels, which enables otherwise forbidden radiofrequency transitions between them. By repeating this process at various magnetic fields, molecules can be successively transported through a large manifold of quantum states. Applying nine transfers, we convert very weakly bound Feshbach molecules to a much more deeply bound level with a binding energy corresponding to 3.6 GHz. As an important spin-off of our experiments, we demonstrate a high-precision spectroscopy method for investigating level crossings.

Cite this article

Lang, F., Straten, P., Brandstätter, B. et al. Cruising through molecular bound-state manifolds with radiofrequency. Nature Phys 4, 223–226 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys838

View full text

>> Full Text:   Cruising through molecular bound-state manifolds with radiofrequency

Ultrafast X-ray study of dense-liquid-jet flow dynamics using structure-tracking velocimetry

Visualization of the interplay between high-temperature superconductivity, the pseudogap and impurit