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Magneto-optical trapping and sub-Doppler cooling of a polyatomic molecule.

Nathaniel B VilasChristian HallasLoïc AndereggPaige RobichaudAndrew WinnickiDebayan MitraJohn M Doyle
Published in: Nature (2022)
Laser cooling and trapping 1,2 , and magneto-optical trapping methods in particular 2 , have enabled groundbreaking advances in science, including Bose-Einstein condensation 3-5 , quantum computation with neutral atoms 6,7 and high-precision optical clocks 8 . Recently, magneto-optical traps (MOTs) of diatomic molecules have been demonstrated 9-12 , providing access to research in quantum simulation 13 and searches for physics beyond the standard model 14 . Compared with diatomic molecules, polyatomic molecules have distinct rotational and vibrational degrees of freedom that promise a variety of transformational possibilities. For example, ultracold polyatomic molecules would be uniquely suited to applications in quantum computation and simulation 15-17 , ultracold collisions 18 , quantum chemistry 19 and beyond-the-standard-model searches 20,21 . However, the complexity of these molecules has so far precluded the realization of MOTs for polyatomic species. Here we demonstrate magneto-optical trapping of a polyatomic molecule, calcium monohydroxide (CaOH). After trapping, the molecules are laser cooled in a blue-detuned optical molasses to a temperature of 110 μK, which is below the Doppler cooling limit. The temperatures and densities achieved here make CaOH a viable candidate for a wide variety of quantum science applications, including quantum simulation and computation using optical tweezer arrays 15,17,22,23 . This work also suggests that laser cooling and magneto-optical trapping of many other polyatomic species 24-27 will be both feasible and practical.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • machine learning
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • quantum dots
  • raman spectroscopy
  • drug discovery