Optical cycling of AlF molecules (2103.15913v2)
Abstract: Aluminium monofluoride (AlF) is a promising candidate for laser cooling and trapping at high densities. We show efficient production of AlF in a bright, pulsed cryogenic buffer gas beam, and demonstrate rapid optical cycling on the Q rotational lines of the $A1\Pi \leftrightarrow X1\Sigma+ $ transition. We measure the brightness of the molecular beam to be $>10{12}$ molecules per steradian per pulse in a single rotational state and present a new method to determine its velocity distribution in a single shot. The photon scattering rate of the optical cycling scheme is measured using three different methods, and is compared to theoretical predictions of the optical Bloch equations and a simplified rate equation model. Despite the large number of Zeeman sublevels (up to 216 for the Q(4) transition) involved, a high scattering rate of at least $17(2)\times 106$ s${-1}$ can be sustained using a single, fixed-frequency laser without the need to modulate the polarisation. We deflect the molecular beam using the radiation pressure force and measure an acceleration of $8.7(1.5)\times 105$ m/s$2$. We demonstrate that losses from the optical cycle due to vibrational branching to $X1\Sigma+, v''=1$ can be addressed efficiently with a single repump laser. Further, we investigate two other loss channels, parity mixing by stray electric fields and photo-ionisation. The upper bounds for these effects are sufficiently low to allow loading into a magneto optical trap.
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