Atom-molecule collisions, spin relaxation, and sympathetic cooling in an ultracold spin-polarized Rb($^2\mathrm{S}$)-SrF$(^2\Sigma^+)$ mixture
Masato Morita, Maciej B. Kosicki, Piotr S. \.Zuchowski, Timur V., Tscherbul

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that ultracold Rb atoms can effectively sympathetically cool SrF molecules in a magnetic trap, with slow spin relaxation and controllable inelastic collisions, advancing the prospects for ultracold molecule research.
Contribution
The paper provides the first quantum scattering calculations for Rb+SrF collisions, showing favorable conditions for sympathetic cooling despite strong anisotropic interactions.
Findings
Spin relaxation is much slower than elastic scattering across a wide magnetic field range.
Ultracold collisions exhibit rich resonance structures, including a low-field p-wave resonance.
Magnetic fields can be used to enhance sympathetic cooling efficiency.
Abstract
We explore the suitability of ultracold collisions between spin-polarized SrF() molecules and Rb(S) atoms as elementary steps for the sympathetic cooling of SrF() molecules in a magnetic trap. To this end, we carry out quantum mechanical scattering calculations on ultracold Rb+SrF collisions in a magnetic field based on an accurate potential energy surface for the triplet electronic state of Rb-SrF developed ab initio using a spin-restricted coupler cluster method with single, double and noniterative triple excitations [RCCSD(T)]. The Rb-SrF interaction has a global minimum with a well depth of 3444 cm in a bent geometry and a shallow local minimum in the linear geometry. Despite such a strong and anisotropic interaction, we find that converged close-coupling scattering calculations on Rb+SrF collisions in a magnetic field are still possible using…
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