Toward 10<sup>4</sup> heavy polyatomic molecules in an optical dipole trap

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

Ultracold SrOH molecules can be used in searches for beyond Standard Model (BSM) physics, such as ultralight dark matter [1] and new CP-violating particles that produce an electron electric dipole moment [2]. In both cases, laser cooling and optical trapping of SrOH is necessary to fully exploit its sensitivity to BSM physics, since long interaction times can be achieved in optical traps and potential systematic errors are mitigated at ultracold temperatures. We present a magneto-optical trap (MOT) of SrOH [3] with >104 molecules, and highlight considerations relevant to trapping heavy species with complex level structure. Ongoing work to load molecules into an optical dipole trap, suitable for precision spectroscopy probing BSM physics, is reported. We describe a near-future roadmap to >105 molecules in the MOT via 2-D transverse magnetically assisted Sisyphus cooling [4], and >104 molecules in the ODT using efficient transfer from a high-density conveyer-belt MOT [5].

[1]: I. Kozyryev, Z. Lasner, and J. M. Doyle, Phys. Rev. A 103, 043313 (2021).

[2]: I. Kozyryev and N. R. Hutzler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 133002 (2017).

[3]: Z. Lasner et al., arXiv:2409.04948 (2024).

[4]: X. Alauze et al., Quantum Sci. Technol. 6 044005 (2021).

[5] G. K. Li, C. Hallas, and J. M. Doyle, arXiv:2409.18090 (2024).

*Q-SEnSE: Quantum Systems through Entangled Science and Engineering (NSF QLCI Award OMA-2016244)

Publication: "Magneto-optical trapping of a heavy polyatomic molecule for precision measurement," Z. D. Lasner, A. Frenett, H. Sawaoka, L. Anderegg, B. Augenbraun, H. Lampson, M. Li, A. Lunstad, J. Mango, A. Nasir, T. Ono, T. Sakamoto, and J. M. Doyle. arXiv:2409.04949 (2024).

Presenters

  • Zack Lasner

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Zack Lasner

    • Harvard University
  • Loic G Anderegg

    • University of Southern California
  • Benjamin L Augenbraun

    • Williams College
  • Rachel Fields

    • Harvard University
  • Alexander Frenett

    • Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University
    • Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
  • Hana Lampson

    • Harvard University
  • Mingda Li

    • Harvard University
  • Annika Lunstad

    • Harvard University
  • Jack Mango

    • Harvard University
  • Abdullah Nasir

    • Harvard University
  • Tasuku Ono

    • Harvard University
  • Takashi Sakamoto

    • University of Tokyo
  • Hiromitsu Sawaoka

    • Harvard University
  • John M Doyle

    • Harvard University