» Articles » PMID: 32284979

Scattering of Adiabatically Aligned Molecules by Nonresonant Optical Standing Waves

Overview
Journal Sci Adv
Specialties Biology
Science
Date 2020 Apr 15
PMID 32284979
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We study the effect of rotational state-dependent alignment in the scattering of molecules by optical fields. CS molecules in their lowest few rotational states are adiabatically aligned and transversely accelerated by a nonresonant optical standing wave. The width of the measured transverse velocity distribution increases to 160 m/s with the field intensity, while its central peak position moves from 10 to -10 m/s. These changes are well reproduced by numerical simulations based on the rotational state-dependent alignment but cannot be modeled when ignoring these effects. Moreover, the molecular scattering by an off-resonant optical field amounts to manipulating the translational motion of molecules in a rotational state-specific way. Conversely, our results demonstrate that scattering from a nonresonant optical standing wave is a viable method for rotational state selection of nonpolar molecules.

References
1.
Freimund D, Aflatooni K, Batelaan H . Observation of the Kapitza-Dirac effect. Nature. 2001; 413(6852):142-3. DOI: 10.1038/35093065. View

2.
Gerlich S, Gring M, Ulbricht H, Hornberger K, Tuxen J, Mayor M . Matter-wave metrology as a complementary tool for mass spectrometry. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2008; 47(33):6195-8. DOI: 10.1002/anie.200801942. View

3.
Itatani J, Levesque J, Zeidler D, Niikura H, Pepin H, Kieffer J . Tomographic imaging of molecular orbitals. Nature. 2004; 432(7019):867-71. DOI: 10.1038/nature03183. View

4.
Minemoto S, Sakai H . Measuring polarizability anisotropies of rare gas diatomic molecules by laser-induced molecular alignment technique. J Chem Phys. 2011; 134(21):214305. DOI: 10.1063/1.3594681. View

5.
Mairhofer L, Eibenberger S, Cotter J, Romirer M, Shayeghi A, Arndt M . Quantum-Assisted Metrology of Neutral Vitamins in the Gas Phase. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2017; 56(36):10947-10951. PMC: 5582605. DOI: 10.1002/anie.201704916. View