Abstract
We report the absolute frequency of the vibrational transition in the electronic ground state of D. Deuterium molecules in the state in a molecular beam are excited to using a narrow-linewidth continuous-wave laser stabilised to an optical frequency comb; a strong static electric field in the excitation region induces a transition dipole moment, greatly enhancing the transition strength. Molecules excited to are state-selectively ionised using a pulsed ultraviolet laser and mass-selectively detected. Spectra recorded by scanning the infrared laser frequency are fit with a multi-Gaussian model that accounts for the intensities and relative frequencies of all hyperfine components at the static electric field strength used in the measurement. Zero-field absolute transition frequencies were determined from fits of 28 spectra recorded at nine different field strengths. Statistical uncertainty and systematic uncertainties due to the field plate spacing and relative intensities of the hyperfine components comprise the bulk of the overall uncertainty. We determine an absolute S(0) transition frequency of 94,925,100,487(17) kHz after correcting for the photon recoil and second-order Doppler shifts. This value agrees with other recent experimental measurements and a theoretical prediction, but with a lower fractional uncertainty of only 0.2 ppb.
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