
AbstractWe explore a technique for decelerating molecules using a static magnetic field and optical pumping. Molecules travel through a spatially varying magnetic field and are repeatedly pumped into a weak‐field seeking state as they move towards each strong field region, and into a strong‐field seeking state as they move towards weak field. The method is time‐independent and so is suitable for decelerating both pulsed and continuous molecular beams. By using guiding magnets at each weak field region, the beam can be simultaneously guided and decelerated. By tapering the magnetic field strength in the strong field regions, and exploiting the Doppler shift, the velocity distribution can be compressed during deceleration. We develop the principles of this deceleration technique, provide a realistic design, use numerical simulations to evaluate its performance for a beam of CaF, and compare this performance to other deceleration methods.
molecular beam deceleration, Chemical Physics, 0306 Physical Chemistry (Incl. Structural), Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph), 0307 Theoretical And Computational Chemistry, Molecular, FOS: Physical sciences, Articles, buffer-gas beams, physics.atom-ph, 530, Physics - Atomic Physics, laser cooling molecules, 0202 Atomic, Particle And Plasma Physics, Nuclear, cold molecules, optical pumping
molecular beam deceleration, Chemical Physics, 0306 Physical Chemistry (Incl. Structural), Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph), 0307 Theoretical And Computational Chemistry, Molecular, FOS: Physical sciences, Articles, buffer-gas beams, physics.atom-ph, 530, Physics - Atomic Physics, laser cooling molecules, 0202 Atomic, Particle And Plasma Physics, Nuclear, cold molecules, optical pumping
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