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Sisyphus Cooling of Electrically Trapped Polyatomic Molecules

Authors :
Zeppenfeld, M.
Englert, B. G. U.
Glöckner, R.
Prehn, A.
Mielenz, M.
Sommer, C.
van Buuren, L. D.
Motsch, M.
Rempe, G.
Source :
Nature 491, 570 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The rich internal structure and long-range dipole-dipole interactions establish polar molecules as unique instruments for quantum-controlled applications and fundamental investigations. Their potential fully unfolds at ultracold temperatures, where a plethora of effects is predicted in many-body physics, quantum information science, ultracold chemistry, and physics beyond the standard model. These objectives have inspired the development of a wide range of methods to produce cold molecular ensembles. However, cooling polyatomic molecules to ultracold temperatures has until now seemed intractable. Here we report on the experimental realization of opto-electrical cooling, a paradigm-changing cooling and accumulation method for polar molecules. Its key attribute is the removal of a large fraction of a molecule's kinetic energy in each step of the cooling cycle via a Sisyphus effect, allowing cooling with only few dissipative decay processes. We demonstrate its potential by reducing the temperature of about 10^6 trapped CH_3F molecules by a factor of 13.5, with the phase-space density increased by a factor of 29 or a factor of 70 discounting trap losses. In contrast to other cooling mechanisms, our scheme proceeds in a trap, cools in all three dimensions, and works for a large variety of polar molecules. With no fundamental temperature limit anticipated down to the photon-recoil temperature in the nanokelvin range, our method eliminates the primary hurdle in producing ultracold polyatomic molecules. The low temperatures, large molecule numbers and long trapping times up to 27 s will allow an interaction-dominated regime to be attained, enabling collision studies and investigation of evaporative cooling toward a BEC of polyatomic molecules.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature 491, 570 (2012)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1208.0046
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11595