Collective transverse cavity cooling of a dense molecular beam

Physics

Scientific paper

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Scientific paper

Based on a classical point particle description, we study light induced transverse collimation and phase space compression of a fast molecular beam traversing the crossover region of a high-Q optical cavity and a standing-wave laser beam. The molecules scatter pump laser light, far detuned from any molecular transition, into the resonant cavity mode. We show that despite a very small probability for this process for a single particle, collective enhancement can lead to significant transverse cooling and collimation above the self-organization threshold. The analytical formulae for this threshold derived from homogeneous one-dimensional (1D) models give surprisingly good estimates for the pulsed 3D case. We compare ring and standing wave cavity geometries and show that phase space compression can be achieved even for extremely small particle field coupling if compensated by a large density and pump power. In the vicinity of the critical point the compression time can be reduced by tailored seeding of the cavity mode or using a second buildup cavity for the pump field.

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