Quantum control of molecular rotation
Christiane P. Koch, Mikhail Lemeshko, Dominique Sugny

TL;DR
This paper reviews how quantum control of molecular rotation can be achieved using electromagnetic fields, with applications ranging from molecular alignment to quantum computing, unifying diverse approaches under a common physics framework.
Contribution
It provides a unified overview of quantum control phenomena in molecular rotation, connecting various subfields and highlighting the underlying physics and potential applications.
Findings
Control over molecular rotation enables alignment, orientation, and cooling.
External fields can steer bimolecular collisions and reactions.
Framework applies to quantum information processing with molecules.
Abstract
The angular momentum of molecules, or, equivalently, their rotation in three-dimensional space, is ideally suited for quantum control. Molecular angular momentum is naturally quantized, time evolution is governed by a well-known Hamiltonian with only a few accurately known parameters, and transitions between rotational levels can be driven by external fields from various parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. Control over the rotational motion can be exerted in one-, two- and many-body scenarios, thereby allowing to probe Anderson localization, target stereoselectivity of bimolecular reactions, or encode quantum information, to name just a few examples. The corresponding approaches to quantum control are pursued within separate, and typically disjoint, subfields of physics, including ultrafast science, cold collisions, ultracold gases, quantum information science, and condensed matter…
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