December 7, 2009 feature
Using lasers to cool and manipulate molecules

(萌妹社区Org.com) -- "For years, we have been using laser cooling to trap and manipulate atoms," David DeMille tells 萌妹社区Org.com. "This has been very useful for both basic science and many applications. Recently there has been great interest in cooling and trapping molecules as well. Their rich internal structure makes molecules useful for a wide range of new experiments and possible applications."
Of course, the complexity that makes molecules interesting also makes them more difficult to manipulate than atoms. Using lasers to cool molecules, therefore, comes with its own set of problems. DeMille, a scientist at Yale University, believes that a solution may have been found. He has been working with Yale colleagues Edward Shuman, John Barry and David Glenn to come up with a viable method of laser cooling for molecules. Their ideas and preliminary experimental results on the subject can be found in 萌妹社区ical Review Letters: 鈥淩adiative Force from Optical Cycling on a Diatomic Molecule.鈥
鈥淎rguably the most difficult part of cooling molecules is trying to apply a force that opposes the molecule鈥檚 velocity. For atoms, this is accomplished using the Doppler effect. A moving atom sees incident light at a Doppler-shifted frequency. By the appropriate choice of laser frequency, you can ensure that the atom preferentially absorbs photons opposing its motion.鈥 DeMille says. 鈥淭he atom receives a small kick along the laser beam from each photon it absorbs, then emits its own photon in a random direction. This cycle returns the atom to its original state, but on average it has been slowed down a little. Do this some tens of thousands of times, and you can slow an atom enough for it to be trapped and manipulated.鈥

With molecules, though, things become tricky. The emission of a photon typically sets a molecule to rotating or vibrating. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 return to the same state they started in,鈥 DeMille explains. 鈥淭he frequency of the laser is no longer correct for its photons to be absorbed by the molecules.鈥 In order to get around this problem, the team at Yale built on a couple of different ideas. He says that Michael di Rosa of Los Alamos National Laboratory pointed out several years ago that certain molecules were not likely to begin vibrating, so that they could be used. However, di Rosa鈥檚 scheme would take at least six different lasers working at the same time such that the rotating (and occasionally vibrating) molecules would all absorb photons. A recent idea came from Jun Ye鈥檚 group at JILA, who pointed out that some classes of molecules could avoid vibration and rotation, but in these molecules the time needed to complete an absorption-emission cycle would be so long that slowing and cooling would be inefficient.
鈥淲e took elements of these two ideas,鈥 DeMille says, 鈥渁nd combined them. We looked at situations where you could have the best of both schemes and picked what should be the easiest case.鈥 Using strontium monofluoride, the team at Yale was able to experimentally demonstrate a scheme for optical cycling in this diatomic molecule using two diode lasers, which are common and inexpensive. 鈥淲e deflected a beam of molecules using a large number of photon kicks from the laser, which is an important step toward laser 肠辞辞濒颈苍驳.鈥
Based on these results, lasercooling of strontium monofluoride should be within reach. 鈥淲e suggest that by adding one more of these simple diode lasers, we should be able to take it the next level and actually cool the molecules. Our calculations show it should work, and we are in the process of experimenting with it now.鈥
More information: Shuman, Barry, Glenn and DeMille, 鈥淩adiative Force from Optical Cycling on a Diatomic Molecule,鈥 萌妹社区ical Review Letters (2009). Available online: .
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