DocumentCode :
1741910
Title :
Experimental demonstration of an optical centrifuge for molecules
Author :
Villeneuve, D.M. ; Aseyev, S. ; Dietrich, Paul ; Spanner, M. ; Ivanov, M.Y. ; Corkum, P.B.
Author_Institution :
Nat. Res. Council of Canada, Ottawa, Ont., Canada
fYear :
2000
fDate :
12-12 May 2000
Firstpage :
139
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Strong field molecular optics aims to control the position, velocity and acceleration, as well as the alignment, angular velocity and angular acceleration of a molecule. Molecular optics shares position control with atomic optics and optical tweezers. Rotation and dissociation are a distinctly molecular processes. Our experiments demonstrate that an extremely strong torque can be applied to a molecule, accelerating it to rotational energy sufficient to break it by the centrifugal force in just 50 ps. The physics on which the molecular centrifuge is based is the angle dependent Stark shift. For small molecules the well depth can exceed 50 meV. That is, even room temperature molecules can be trapped. Adiabatically rotating the laser polarization must rotate the trapped molecule. Accelerating the rotation of the laser polarization must accelerate the molecular rotation. We have studied three different molecules, Cl/sub 2/, O/sub 2/ and CS/sub 2/ with most work performed on Cl/sub 2/.
Keywords :
Stark effect; carbon compounds; chlorine; molecule-photon collisions; oxygen; particle optics; potential energy surfaces; radiation pressure; rotational states; 298 K; 50 meV; 50 ps; CS/sub 2/; Cl/sub 2/; O/sub 2/; acceleration control; adiabatic rotation; alignment control; angle dependent Stark shift; angular acceleration; angular velocity control; atomic optics; centrifugal force; dissociation; laser polarization; molecular centrifuge; molecular optics; molecular rotation; molecules; optical centrifuge; optical tweezers; position control; room temperature molecule; rotation; rotational energy; strong field molecular optics; trapped molecule; velocity control; well depth; Acceleration; Angular velocity; Angular velocity control; Atom optics; Laser theory; Optical control; Polarization; Position control; Torque; Ultraviolet sources;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference, 2000. (QELS 2000). Technical Digest
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA, USA
ISSN :
1094-5695
Print_ISBN :
1-55752-608-7
Type :
conf
Filename :
901768
Link To Document :
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