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Published July 11, 2023 | public
Journal Article

Intensity-Borrowing Mechanisms Pertinent to Laser Cooling of Linear Polyatomic Molecules

Abstract

A study of the intensity-borrowing mechanisms important to optical cycling transitions in laser-coolable polyatomic molecules arising from non-adiabatic coupling, contributions beyond the Franck–Condon approximation, and Fermi resonances is reported. It has been shown to be necessary to include non-adiabatic coupling to obtain computational accuracy that is sufficient to be useful for laser cooling of molecules. The predicted vibronic branching ratios using perturbation theory based on the non-adiabatic mechanisms have been demonstrated to agree well with those obtained from variational discrete variable representation calculations for representative molecules including CaOH, SrOH, and YbOH. The electron-correlation and basis-set effects on the calculated transition properties, including the vibronic coupling constants, the spin–orbit coupling matrix elements, and the transition dipole moments, and on the calculated branching ratios have been thoroughly studied. The vibronic branching ratios predicted using the present methodologies demonstrate that RaOH is a promising radioactive molecule candidate for laser cooling.

Additional Information

© 2023 American Chemical Society. The authors thank John. F. Stanton (University of Florida) for stimulating discussions on the evaluation of transition dipole moments in diabatic representation, Peter Bryan Changala (Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) for helpful discussions on the transition dipole moment derivatives mechanism, and Benjamin L. Augenbraun (Harvard University) for helpful discussions on intensity-borrowing mechanisms. The work at the Johns Hopkins University was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Grant PHY-2011794. The work at California Institute of Technology was supported by Heising-Simons Foundation Award 2022-3361, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Award GBMF7947, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Award G-2019-12502, and NSF CAREER Award PHY-1847550. The computations at Johns Hopkins University were carried out at Advanced Research Computing at Hopkins (ARCH) core facility (rockfish.jhu.edu), which is supported by the NSF under Grant OAC-1920103. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023