Abstract

Molecular laser cooling and trapping requires addressing all spontaneous decays to excited vibrational states that occur at the $\gtrsim 10^{-4} - 10^{-5}$ level, which is accomplished by driving repumping transitions out of these states. However, the transitions must first be identified spectroscopically at high-resolution. A typical approach is to prepare molecules in excited vibrational states via optical cycling and pumping, which requires multiple high-power lasers. Here, we demonstrate a general method to perform this spectroscopy without the need for optical cycling. We produce molecules in excited vibrational states by using optically-driven chemical reactions in a cryogenic buffer gas cell, and implement frequency-modulated absorption to perform direct, sensitive, high-resolution spectroscopy. We demonstrate this technique by measuring the spectrum of the $\tilde{A}^2\Pi_{1/2}(1,0,0)-\tilde{X}^2\Sigma^+(3,0,0)$ band in $^{174}$YbOH. We identify the specific vibrational repump transitions needed for photon cycling, and combine our data with previous measurements of the $\tilde{A}^2\Pi_{1/2}(1,0,0)-\tilde{X}^2\Sigma^+(0,0,0)$ band to determine all of the relevant spectral constants of the $\tilde{X}^2\Sigma^+(3,0,0)$ state. This technique achieves high signal-to-noise, can be further improved to measure increasingly high-lying vibrational states, and is applicable to other molecular species favorable for laser cooling.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call