Cold And Ultracold Molecules Durham University Uk 1517 April 2009

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488 pages 2009

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"There have been enormous recent advances in our ability to produce and trap samples of translationally cold molecules (below 1 K) and ultracold molecules (below 1 mK). Molecules such as NH3, OH and NH have been cooled from room temperature to the milliKelvin regime by a variety of methods including buffer-gas cooling and Stark deceleration. Molecules have also been produced in ultracold atomic gases by photoassociation and magnetoassociation of pairs of atoms. Bose-Einstein condensates have been produced for dimers of both bosonic and fermionic alkali metal atoms, and the first signatures of ultracold triatomic and tetraatomic molecules have been observed. The new capabilities open up many exciting prospects, including: the study of collision processes in unprecedented detail using cooled or velocity-controlled species; the use of cold molecules in high-precision measurement to observe fundamentally important quantities; the production of quantum gases of dipolar molecules, which would exhibit many new properties; the use of cold molecules as qubits in quantum computing; and controlled ultracold chemistry, in which controlled chemical changes are achieved coherently for large samples using external fields."--Publisher's description.

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