Spectroscopy of AlCl at 261nm for Laser Cooling and Trapping
POSTER
Abstract
Ultra-cold dipolar molecules offer platforms for precision measurements of fundamental constants, quantum computation, study of ultracold chemistry and other novel physics. Aluminum mono-chloride (AlCl) has been proposed as a promising candidate for laser cooling and trapping. We use a frequency-tripled CW Titanium-Sapphire laser to do spectroscopy on AlCl generated via laser ablation of AlCl3 and other precursors in a cryogenic helium buffer-gas beam source. The spectroscopy light is produced by first frequency-doubling 784nm to 392nm. The 392nm light is then combined with the fundamental in a sum-frequency process to create light at 261nm. Here, we discuss details of our molecular beam source and our laser system for generating UV light and we present our spectroscopy results for the X1Σ+ → A1Π transition in AlCl and our estimated Frank-Condon factors for the ν=0 →ν′ =0 and ν=1→ν′ =1 transitions. Furthermore, we present our results on investigating various precursors for producing AlCl.
Publication: Spectroscopy on the X1Σ+ → A1Π Transition of Aluminum Mono-chloride. J. Daniel, C. Wang, K. Rodriguez, T. Lewis, A. Teplukhin, B. Kendrick, C. Bardeen, B. Hemmerling. (2021, in progress)
Presenters
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Chen Wang
University of California, Riverside
Authors
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Chen Wang
University of California, Riverside
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John R Daniel
University of California, Riverside
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Taylor Lewis
University of California, Riverside
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Alexander Teplukhin
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos Natl Lab
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Brian K Kendrick
Los Alamos Natl Lab
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Chris Bardeen
University of California, Riverside
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Shan-Wen Tsai
University of California, Riverside
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Boerge Hemmerling
University of California, Riverside, UC Riverside