https://doi.org/10.1140/epjd/e2004-00163-6
Microwave traps for cold polar molecules
Physics Department, Yale University, P.O. Box 208120,
New Haven, CT 06520, USA
Corresponding author: a david.demille@yale.edu
Received:
30
June
2004
Published online:
23
November
2004
We discuss the possibility of trapping polar molecules in the standing-wave electromagnetic field of a microwave resonant cavity. Such a trap has several novel features that make it very attractive for the development of ultracold molecule sources. Using commonly available technologies, microwave traps can be built with large depth (up to several Kelvin) and acceptance volume (up to several cm3), suitable for efficient loading with currently available sources of cold polar molecules. Unlike most previous traps for molecules, this technology can be used to confine the strong-field seeking absolute ground state of the molecule, in a free-space maximum of the microwave electric field. Such ground state molecules should be immune to inelastic collisional losses. We calculate elastic collision cross-sections for the trapped molecules, due to the electrical polarization of the molecules at the trap center, and find that they are extraordinarily large. Thus, molecules in a microwave trap should be very amenable to sympathetic and/or evaporative cooling. The combination of these properties seems to open a path to producing large samples of polar molecules at temperatures much lower than has been previously possible.
PACS: 33.80.Ps – Optical cooling of molecules; trapping / 34.50.-s – Scattering of atoms and molecules / 33.80.-b – Photon interactions with molecules / 33.55.Be – Zeeman and Stark effects
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica, Springer-Verlag, 2004