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Ultracold field-linked tetratomic molecules

Authors :
Chen, Xing-Yan
Biswas, Shrestha
Eppelt, Sebastian
Schindewolf, Andreas
Deng, Fulin
Shi, Tao
Yi, Su
Hilker, Timon A.
Bloch, Immanuel
Luo, Xin-Yu
Source :
Nature 626, 283 (2024)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Ultracold polyatomic molecules offer intriguing new opportunities in cold chemistry, precision measurements, and quantum information processing, thanks to their rich internal structure. However, their increased complexity compared to diatomic molecules presents a formidable challenge to employ conventional cooling techniques. Here, we demonstrate a new approach to create ultracold polyatomic molecules by electroassociation in a degenerate Fermi gas of microwave-dressed polar molecules through a field-linked resonance. Starting from ground state NaK molecules, we create around $1.1\times 10^3$ tetratomic (NaK)$_2$ molecules, with a phase space density of $0.040(3)$ at a temperature of $134(3)\,\text{nK}$, more than $3000$ times colder than previously realized tetratomic molecules. We observe a maximum tetramer lifetime of $8(2)\,\text{ms}$ in free space without a notable change in the presence of an optical dipole trap, indicating these tetramers are collisionally stable. The measured binding energy and lifetime agree well with parameter-free calculations, which outlines pathways to further increase the lifetime of the tetramers. Moreover, we directly image the dissociated tetramers through microwave-field modulation to probe the anisotropy of their wave function in momentum space. Our result demonstrates a universal tool for assembling ultracold polyatomic molecules from smaller polar molecules, which is a crucial step towards Bose--Einstein condensation (BEC) of polyatomic molecules and towards a new crossover from a dipolar Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) superfluid to a BEC of tetramers. Additionally, the long-lived FL state provides an ideal starting point for deterministic optical transfer to deeply bound tetramer states.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature 626, 283 (2024)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.00962
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06986-6