Non-destructive state detection for quantum logic spectroscopy of molecular ions
Fabian Wolf, Yong Wan, Jan C. Heip, Florian Gebert, Chunyan Shi, Piet, O. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a non-destructive quantum logic spectroscopy technique for molecular ions, enabling efficient state detection through Coulomb coupling with atomic ions, with applications in fundamental physics and quantum chemistry.
Contribution
The authors introduce a novel non-destructive state detection method using a state-dependent optical dipole force, improving molecular ion spectroscopy capabilities.
Findings
Achieved non-destructive detection of molecular ion states via Coulomb coupling
Observed quantum jumps between rotational states induced by black-body radiation
Improved measurement of a molecular transition frequency in MgH
Abstract
Laser spectroscopy of cold and trapped molecular ions is a powerful tool for fundamental physics, including the determination of fundamental constants, the laboratory test for their possible variation, and the search for a possible electric dipole moment of the electron. Optical clocks based on molecular ions sensitive to some of these effects are expected to achieve uncertainties approaching the level. While the complexity of molecular structure facilitates these applications, the absence of cycling transitions poses a challenge for direct laser cooling, quantum state control, and detection. Previously employed state detection techniques based on photo-dissociation or chemical reactions are destructive and therefore inefficient. Here we experimentally demonstrate non-destructive state detection of a single trapped molecular ion through its strong Coulomb coupling to a…
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