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Control of Ultracold Photodissociation with Magnetic Fields
arXiv
Authors: M. McDonald, I. Majewska, C. -H. Lee, S. S. Kondov, B. H. McGuyer, R. Moszynski, T. Zelevinsky
Year
2017
Paper ID
7510
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
109
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Photodissociation of a molecule produces a spatial distribution of photofragments determined by the molecular structure and the characteristics of the dissociating light. Performing this basic chemical reaction at ultracold temperatures allows its quantum mechanical features to dominate. In this regime, weak applied fields can be used to control the reaction. Here, we photodissociate ultracold diatomic strontium in magnetic fields below 10 G and observe striking changes in photofragment angular distributions. The observations are in excellent qualitative agreement with a multichannel quantum chemistry model that includes nonadiabatic effects and predicts strong mixing of partial waves in the photofragment energy continuum. The experiment is enabled by precise quantum-state control of the molecules.
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- Photodissociation of a molecule produces a spatial distribution of photofragments determined by the molecular structure and the characteristics of the dissociating light.
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