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Observation of Microwave Shielding of Ultracold Molecules

POSTER

Abstract

Ultracold gases of high-density polar molecules have been observed to suffer rapid 2-body losses due to a variety of inelastic mechanisms ranging from chemical reactions to trap-light induced losses. Gaining control over collisional properties is a necessary step towards evaporative cooling of polar molecules. Here we demonstrate the suppression of inelastic collisional loss between two calcium monofluoride (CaF) molecules in a merged optical tweezer trap. High power circular polarized microwaves are used to engineer a repulsive interaction in 3D (i.e. for all collision trajectories). This effective repulsive shield suppresses the inelastic loss rate by a factor of six, in agreement with coupled channel calculations, which also predict an increased elastic cross section. The demonstrated microwave shielding shows a possible route to the creation of long-lived, dense samples of ultracold molecules through evaporative cooling.

Publication: arXiv:2102.04365

Presenters

  • Sean Burchesky

    Harvard University

Authors

  • Sean Burchesky

    Harvard University

  • Loic Anderegg

    Harvard University

  • Yicheng Bao

    Harvard University

  • Scarlett Yu

    Harvard University

  • Tijs Karman

    IMM, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Radboud University

  • Eunmi Chae

    Korea University

  • Kang-Kuen Ni

    Harvard University, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Department of Physics, and Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms, Harvard University

  • Wolfgang Ketterle

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • John M Doyle

    Harvard University