Conveyor-belt magneto-optical trapping of molecules
Grace K. Li, Christian Hallas, John M. Doyle

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical study of a conveyor-belt mechanism in blue-detuned magneto-optical traps for molecules, explaining how it enhances molecular cloud compression and cooling.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed theoretical analysis and numerical simulations of the conveyor-belt mechanism in blue-detuned MOTs for molecules, expanding understanding of molecular cooling techniques.
Findings
Conveyor-belt mechanism leads to stronger molecular cloud compression.
Numerical simulations match experimental observations.
Laser parameters and molecular structure influence trap performance.
Abstract
Laser cooling is used to produce ultracold atoms and molecules for quantum science and precision measurement applications. Molecules are more challenging to cool than atoms due to their vibrational and rotational internal degrees of freedom. Molecular rotations lead to the use of type-II transitions () for magneto-optical trapping (MOT). When typical red detuned light frequencies are applied to these transitions, sub-Doppler heating is induced, resulting in higher temperatures and larger molecular cloud sizes than realized with the type-I MOTs most often used with atoms. To improve type-II MOTs, Jarvis et al. PRL 120, 083201 (2018) proposed a blue-detuned MOT to be applied after initial cooling and capture with a red-detuned MOT. This was successfully implemented (Burau et al. PRL 130, 193401 (2023), Jorapur et al. PRL 132, 163403 (2024), Li et al. PRL 132, 233402 (2024)),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum Information and Cryptography
