Two-photon coherent control of femtosecond photoassociation
Christiane P. Koch, Mamadou Ndong, Ronnie Kosloff

TL;DR
This paper proposes a two-photon femtosecond photoassociation method using phase control to efficiently create ultracold molecules while avoiding atomic excitation, advancing coherent control techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-photon control scheme with spectral and temporal phase manipulation to suppress atomic excitation in femtosecond photoassociation.
Findings
Analytical solutions for atomic two-photon dark states derived.
Phase control can suppress atomic transitions effectively.
Feasibility demonstrated for calcium and other metal dimers.
Abstract
Photoassociation with short laser pulses has been proposed as a technique to create ultracold ground state molecules. A broad-band excitation seems the natural choice to drive the series of excitation and deexcitation steps required to form a molecule in its vibronic ground state from two scattering atoms. First attempts at femtosecond photoassociation were, however, hampered by the requirement to eliminate the atomic excitation leading to trap depletion. On the other hand, molecular levels very close to the atomic transition are to be excited. The broad bandwidth of a femtosecond laser then appears to be rather an obstacle. To overcome the ostensible conflict of driving a narrow transition by a broad-band laser, we suggest a two-photon photoassociation scheme. In the weak-field regime, a spectral phase pattern can be employed to eliminate the atomic line. When the excitation is carried…
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