A cryogenic beam of refractory, chemically reactive molecules with expansion cooling
Nicholas R. Hutzler, Maxwell Parsons, Yulia V. Gurevich, Paul W. Hess,, Elizabeth Petrik, Ben Spaun, Amar C. Vutha, David DeMille, Gerald Gabrielse,, John M. Doyle

TL;DR
This paper reports the development and characterization of cryogenic buffer gas beam sources for ThO molecules, achieving high flux, low divergence, and internal cooling, suitable for precision spectroscopy and applicable to reactive species.
Contribution
It introduces optimized helium and neon buffer gas sources for ThO, demonstrating effective internal cooling and high molecular flux at cryogenic temperatures.
Findings
ThO beams with high flux (~10^11 molecules per pulse)
Internal temperature cooled to as low as 2 K
Neon-based source achieves a forward velocity of 170 m/s
Abstract
Cryogenically cooled buffer gas beam sources of the molecule thorium monoxide (ThO) are optimized and characterized. Both helium and neon buffer gas sources are shown to produce ThO beams with high flux, low divergence, low forward velocity, and cold internal temperature for a variety of stagnation densities and nozzle diameters. The beam operates with a buffer gas stagnation density of ~10^15-10^16 cm^-3 (Reynolds number ~1-100), resulting in expansion cooling of the internal temperature of the ThO to as low as 2 K. For the neon (helium) based source, this represents cooling by a factor of about 10 (2) from the initial nozzle temperature of about 20 K (4 K). These sources deliver ~10^11 ThO molecules in a single quantum state within a 1-3 ms long pulse at 10 Hz repetition rate. Under conditions optimized for a future precision spectroscopy application [A C Vutha et al 2010 J. Phys. B:…
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