Raman gas self-organizing into deep nano-trap lattice

Trapping or cooling molecules has rallied a long-standing effort for its impact in exploring new frontiers in physics and in finding new phase of matter for quantum technologies. Here we demonstrate a system for light-trapping molecules and stimulated Raman scattering based on optically self-nanostr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2016-09, Vol.7 (1), p.12779-12779, Article 12779
Hauptverfasser: Alharbi, M., Husakou, A., Chafer, M., Debord, B., Gérôme, F., Benabid, F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Trapping or cooling molecules has rallied a long-standing effort for its impact in exploring new frontiers in physics and in finding new phase of matter for quantum technologies. Here we demonstrate a system for light-trapping molecules and stimulated Raman scattering based on optically self-nanostructured molecular hydrogen in hollow-core photonic crystal fibre. A lattice is formed by a periodic and ultra-deep potential caused by a spatially modulated Raman saturation, where Raman-active molecules are strongly localized in a one-dimensional array of nanometre-wide sections. Only these trapped molecules participate in stimulated Raman scattering, generating high-power forward and backward Stokes continuous-wave laser radiation in the Lamb–Dicke regime with sub-Doppler emission spectrum. The spectrum exhibits a central line with a sub-recoil linewidth as low as ∼14 kHz, more than five orders of magnitude narrower than conventional-Raman pressure-broadened linewidth, and sidebands comprising Mollow triplet, motional sidebands and four-wave mixing. Engineering the interaction between optical fields and gas-phase matters is important for spectroscopy and more general laser science and technology. Here, the authors demonstrate a method for light-trapping of molecular hydrogen in hollow-core photonic-crystal fibres, relying on Raman transition.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms12779