Inner-shell excitation in the YbF molecule and its impact on laser cooling
Chi Zhang, Chaoqun Zhang, Lan Cheng, Timothy C. Steimle, Michael R., Tarbutt

TL;DR
This study models the electronic states of YbF to understand how 4f electron excitations affect laser cooling efficiency, identifying potential losses and providing insights for improving ultracold molecule experiments.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed theoretical analysis of 4f hole states and their impact on laser cooling cycles in YbF, highlighting the role of perturbations and radiative decay pathways.
Findings
Identified a cooling cycle leak with a branching ratio of ~5×10^{-4}.
Characterized the coupling strength between states and potential energy curves.
Assessed the implications for laser cooling efficiency in YbF and similar molecules.
Abstract
The YbF molecule is a sensitive system for measuring the electron's electric dipole moment. The precision of this measurement can be improved by direct laser cooling of the molecules to ultracold temperature. However, low-lying electronic states arising from excitation of a 4f electron may hinder laser cooling. One set of these "4f hole" states lies below the excited state used for laser cooling, and radiative decay to these intermediate levels, even with branching ratios as small as , can be a hindrance. Other 4f hole states lie very close to the state, and a perturbation results in states of mixed character that are involved in the laser cooling cycle. This perturbation may enhance the loss of molecules to states outside of the laser cooling cycle. We model the perturbation of the state to determine the strength of the coupling…
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