English

Microstructured Stark Decelerator

Atomic Physics 2017-05-25 v1

Abstract

A Stark decelerator is an effective tool for controlling motional degrees of freedom of polar molecules. Due to technical limitations, many of the current Stark decelerators focus on molecules in low-field-seeking quantum states and are built based on a fixed electrode size and spacing (type-A architecture). Here, we present an alternative method based on a different architecture, so-called type-B, with microstructured electrodes and a simpler electric field pulse timing with the prospect of producing cold, quasi-CW molecular beams. We demonstrate with simulations the feasibility of this method and show that a 2 cm decelerator consisting of 100 stages can bring molecules from 200 m/s to a near standstill in about 150 microseconds. Subsequently, the molecules can be reaccelerated to 200 m/s in a phase-stable manner. Our simulations focus on the longitudinal transmission leaving the problem of a transverse confinement for a future study. This work points to a possible way of integrating polar molecule accelerators with solid-state electronics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1705.08570,
  title  = {Microstructured Stark Decelerator},
  author = {Demitri Y. Balabanov and Liam M. Duffy},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.08570},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

8 pages, 7 figures