Photoassociation of ultracold long-range polyatomic molecules
Marko Gacesa, Jason N. Byrd, Jonathan Smucker, John A., Montgomery, Jr., Robin C\^ot\'e

TL;DR
This paper investigates the optical formation of stable, long-range polyatomic molecules from ultracold polar diatomic molecules, revealing new stable tetratomic configurations and potential for creating complex ultracold molecules.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for forming stable long-range tetratomic molecules from ultracold polar diatomic molecules, expanding possibilities for ultracold polyatomic molecule synthesis.
Findings
Stable long-range tetratomic molecules can be formed as halo states or collinear complexes.
Numerical studies with KRb and RbCs demonstrate formation of (KRb)$_2$ and (RbCs)$_2$ complexes.
Identification of linear polar triatomic and tetratomic molecules suitable for this approach.
Abstract
We explore the feasibility of optically forming long-range tetratomic and larger polyatomic molecules in their ground electronic state from ultracold pairs of polar molecules aligned by external fields. Depending on the relative orientation of the interacting diatomic molecules, we find that a tetratomic can be formed either as a weakly bound complex in a very extended halo state or as a pure long-range molecule composed of collinear or nearly-collinear diatomic molecules. The latter is a novel type of tetratomic molecule comprised of two diatomic molecules bound at long intermolecular range and predicted to be stable in cold and ultracold regimes. Our numerical studies were conducted for ultracold KRb and RbCs, resulting in production of (KRb) and (RbCs) complexes, respectively. Based on universal properties of long-range interactions between polar molecules, we identify…
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