arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:quant-ph/0402066AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Stabilization of Ultracold Molecules Using Optimal Control Theory

Christiane P. Koch, José P. Palao, Ronnie Kosloff, Françoise Masnou-Seeuws

Published 2004-02-09Version 1

In recent experiments on ultracold matter, molecules have been produced from ultracold atoms by photoassociation, Feshbach resonances, and three-body recombination. The created molecules are translationally cold, but vibrationally highly excited. This will eventually lead them to be lost from the trap due to collisions. We propose shaped laser pulses to transfer these highly excited molecules to their ground vibrational level. Optimal control theory is employed to find the light field that will carry out this task with minimum intensity. We present results for the sodium dimer. The final target can be reached to within 99% if the initial guess field is physically motivated. We find that the optimal fields contain the transition frequencies required by a good Franck-Condon pumping scheme. The analysis is able to identify the ranges of intensity and pulse duration which are able to achieve this task before other competing process take place. Such a scheme could produce stable ultracold molecular samples or even stable molecular Bose-Einstein condensates.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1906.06960 [quant-ph] (Published 2019-06-17)
Complex collisions of ultracold molecules: a toy model
arXiv:2309.07659 [quant-ph] (Published 2023-09-14)
Mitigating controller noise in quantum gates using optimal control theory
arXiv:quant-ph/0309011 (Published 2003-08-31)
Optimal control theory for unitary transformations