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arxiv: 1104.3901 · v1 · pith:B6JWNWOCnew · submitted 2011-04-19 · ⚛️ physics.atom-ph · physics.flu-dyn

Cold and Slow Molecular Beam

classification ⚛️ physics.atom-ph physics.flu-dyn
keywords beamvelocitymoleculescellcoldcryogenicfluxforward
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Employing a two-stage cryogenic buffer gas cell, we produce a cold, hydrodynamically extracted beam of calcium monohydride molecules with a near effusive velocity distribution. Beam dynamics, thermalization and slowing are studied using laser spectroscopy. The key to this hybrid, effusive-like beam source is a "slowing cell" placed immediately after a hydrodynamic, cryogenic source [Patterson et al., J. Chem. Phys., 2007, 126, 154307]. The resulting CaH beams are created in two regimes. One modestly boosted beam has a forward velocity of vf = 65 m/s, a narrow velocity spread, and a flux of 10^9 molecules per pulse. The other has the slowest forward velocity of vf = 40 m/s, a longitudinal temperature of 3.6 K, and a flux of 5x10^8 molecules per pulse.

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