An intense, cold, velocity-controlled molecular beam by frequency-chirped laser slowing
classification
⚛️ physics.atom-ph
keywords
slowingbeamfrequency-chirpedvelocitylasermethodmolecularcold
read the original abstract
Using frequency-chirped radiation pressure slowing, we precisely control the velocity of a pulsed CaF molecular beam down to a few m/s, compressing its velocity spread by a factor of 10 while retaining high intensity: at a velocity of 15~m/s the flux, measured 1.3~m from the source, is 7$\times$10$^{5}$ molecules per cm$^{2}$ per shot in a single rovibrational state. The beam is suitable for loading a magneto-optical trap or, when combined with transverse laser cooling, improving the precision of spectroscopic measurements that test fundamental physics. We compare the frequency-chirped slowing method with the more commonly used frequency-broadened slowing method.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.