Magneto-optical forces applied to polyatomic molecules

POSTER

Abstract

In recent years, laser cooling has been successfully applied to diatomic molecular systems, resulting in robust magneto optical traps (MOTs) and grey molasses cooling to the $\mu$Kelvin temperature regime. Polyatomic molecules have additional (controllable) degrees of freedom, compared to their diatomic counterparts, that provide further advantages for a myriad of applications in quantum science [1-3]. Here we present the one-dimensional magneto-optical cooling and compression (1D MOT) of a cryogenic buffer-gas beam [4] of calcium monohydroxide (CaOH) molecules [5]. We establish a quasi-closed cycling transition and scatter 10$^3$ photons per molecule, with this number limited predominantly by interaction time. The resulting cooling and compression lead to an increase in on-axis molecular beam brightness and a reduction of temperature from 8.4 mK to 1.4 mK. This demonstration realizes a significant milestone on the route towards a 3D MOT of CaOH and the laser cooling of polyatomic molecules into the $\mu$Kelvin regime . [1] Kozyryev and Hutzler, PRL 119, 133002 (2017). [2] Yu et. al., New J. Phys. 21 093049 (2019) [3] Wall et. al., New J. Phys. 17, 025001 (2015). [4] Hutzler et. al., Chem. Rev. 112, 9 4803 (2012) [5] Baum et. al., arXiv 2001.10525

Authors

  • Louis Baum

    • Harvard University
  • Nathanial Vilas

    • Harvard University
  • Christian Hallas

    • Harvard University
  • Shivam Raval

    • Harvard University
  • Benjamin Augenbraun

    • Harvard University
  • Debayan Mitra

    • Harvard University
  • John Doyle

    • Harvard University