Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules
Since the original work on Bose–Einstein condensation1,2, the use of quantum degenerate gases of atoms has enabled the quantum emulation of important systems in condensed matter and nuclear physics, as well as the study of many-body states that have no analogue in other fields of physics3. Ultracold...
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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
2021
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130129 |
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author | Son, Hyungmok Park, Juliana J. Ketterle, Wolfgang Jamison, Alan O |
author2 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of Electronics |
author_facet | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of Electronics Son, Hyungmok Park, Juliana J. Ketterle, Wolfgang Jamison, Alan O |
author_sort | Son, Hyungmok |
collection | MIT |
description | Since the original work on Bose–Einstein condensation1,2, the use of quantum degenerate gases of atoms has enabled the quantum emulation of important systems in condensed matter and nuclear physics, as well as the study of many-body states that have no analogue in other fields of physics3. Ultracold molecules in the micro- and nanokelvin regimes are expected to bring powerful capabilities to quantum emulation4 and quantum computing5, owing to their rich internal degrees of freedom compared to atoms, and to facilitate precision measurement and the study of quantum chemistry6. Quantum gases of ultracold atoms can be created using collision-based cooling schemes such as evaporative cooling, but thermalization and collisional cooling have not yet been realized for ultracold molecules. Other techniques, such as the use of supersonic jets and cryogenic buffer gases, have reached temperatures limited to above 10 millikelvin7,8. Here we show cooling of NaLi molecules to micro- and nanokelvin temperatures through collisions with ultracold Na atoms, with both molecules and atoms prepared in their stretched hyperfine spin states. We find a lower bound on the ratio of elastic to inelastic molecule–atom collisions that is greater than 50—large enough to support sustained collisional cooling. By employing two stages of evaporation, we increase the phase-space density of the molecules by a factor of 20, achieving temperatures as low as 220 nanokelvin. The favourable collisional properties of the Na–NaLi system could enable the creation of deeply quantum degenerate dipolar molecules and raises the possibility of using stretched spin states in the cooling of other molecules. ©2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. |
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format | Article |
id | mit-1721.1/130129 |
institution | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-09-23T15:59:12Z |
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publisher | Springer Science and Business Media LLC |
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spelling | mit-1721.1/1301292022-10-02T05:34:10Z Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules Son, Hyungmok Park, Juliana J. Ketterle, Wolfgang Jamison, Alan O Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of Electronics MIT-Harvard Center for Ultracold Atoms Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics Since the original work on Bose–Einstein condensation1,2, the use of quantum degenerate gases of atoms has enabled the quantum emulation of important systems in condensed matter and nuclear physics, as well as the study of many-body states that have no analogue in other fields of physics3. Ultracold molecules in the micro- and nanokelvin regimes are expected to bring powerful capabilities to quantum emulation4 and quantum computing5, owing to their rich internal degrees of freedom compared to atoms, and to facilitate precision measurement and the study of quantum chemistry6. Quantum gases of ultracold atoms can be created using collision-based cooling schemes such as evaporative cooling, but thermalization and collisional cooling have not yet been realized for ultracold molecules. Other techniques, such as the use of supersonic jets and cryogenic buffer gases, have reached temperatures limited to above 10 millikelvin7,8. Here we show cooling of NaLi molecules to micro- and nanokelvin temperatures through collisions with ultracold Na atoms, with both molecules and atoms prepared in their stretched hyperfine spin states. We find a lower bound on the ratio of elastic to inelastic molecule–atom collisions that is greater than 50—large enough to support sustained collisional cooling. By employing two stages of evaporation, we increase the phase-space density of the molecules by a factor of 20, achieving temperatures as low as 220 nanokelvin. The favourable collisional properties of the Na–NaLi system could enable the creation of deeply quantum degenerate dipolar molecules and raises the possibility of using stretched spin states in the cooling of other molecules. ©2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. NSF award (1506369) 2021-03-12T23:57:51Z 2021-03-12T23:57:51Z 2020-04 2019-07 2020-11-02T17:35:37Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 1476-4687 https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130129 Son, Hyungmok et al., "Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules." Nature 580, 7802 (April 2020): 197–200 ©2020 Authors en https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/S41586-020-2141-Z Nature Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Springer Science and Business Media LLC arXiv |
spellingShingle | Son, Hyungmok Park, Juliana J. Ketterle, Wolfgang Jamison, Alan O Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title | Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title_full | Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title_fullStr | Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title_full_unstemmed | Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title_short | Collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
title_sort | collisional cooling of ultracold molecules |
url | https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130129 |
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