The trapping of heavy molecules without the use of lasers opens up a new path to novel physics

Gotcha: A cartoon illustrating how molecules of strontium fluoride are slowed and trapped within a Stark decelerator, then interrogated by a laser beam. 
(Courtesy: Jasmeet Jassal and Parul Aggarwal)


 Major accelerator facilities, like as CERN's Large Hadron Collider, or massive subterranean detectors for neutrinos, dark matter, and other exotic particles, are frequently used in the search for physics outside the Standard Model. Researchers in the Netherlands have now opened a new front in the search for heavy neutral molecules by creating a novel laboratory-scale approach for trapping them. Despite the fact that such molecules are great candidates for detecting beyond-the-Standard-Model asymmetries in the electron's electric dipole moment (eEDM), earlier approaches were unable to confine them. As a result, the approach provides physicists with a new set of instruments for discovering novel physics.


High-precision spectroscopy on atoms or molecules that are first slowed and then trapped using lasers or electric fields for the duration of the experiment is a standard approach used in eEDM searches. The challenge is that discovering new physics may need capturing molecules that are too heavy for lasers to confine. In contrast to neutral atoms or molecules, electric fields can only capture heavy ions.


It's a ruse!

Researchers at the University of Groningen have added a new approach to the list, which they developed in partnership with colleagues at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Nikhef, the Dutch particle physics institution. The researchers start by making strontium fluoride (SrF) molecules using a chemical process that takes place inside a cryogenic atmosphere at roughly 20 K. The starting velocities of these molecules are 190 m/s, compared to roughly 500 m/s at ambient temperature.


The molecules then enter a Stark decelerator, a 4.5-metre-long device that uses alternating electric fields to slow and finally halt them. The SrF molecules are confined for 50 milliseconds before being analyzed by the researchers using a separate laser-induced fluorescence detecting device. These measurements disclose fundamental electron characteristics, such as the eEDM, which may subsequently be examined for asymmetry.


The more weight, the better

According to Steven Hoekstra, a physicist at Groningen and the study's senior investigator, these SrF molecules are about three times heavier than other molecules previously trapped using comparable procedures. “Our next step is to trap even heavier molecules, such as barium fluoride (BaF), which is one-and-a-half times heavier than SrF,” he says. “This type of molecule is even better for measurements on the electron dipole. Basically, the heavier [the molecule], the better these measurements will become.”


Beyond eEDM studies, trapping heavy molecules has further applications. Studying collisions between molecules at low energies, under conditions comparable to those observed in space, is one example. Slowly moving molecules might possibly provide more information on the quantum nature of their interactions. The so-called dipole-dipole interaction, which is dependent on the orientation of the molecules relative to each other, makes a huge impact in how they interact at high enough densities. These observations open up possibilities that aren't available with stationary atoms that don't interact in this way.


Complex and chiral

Hoekstra and his colleagues want to boost the sensitivity of their measuring setup by increasing the intensity of their molecular beam as a next step. “We are also thinking of trapping more complex molecules, such as BaOH, or BaOCH3,” According to Physics World, he says“Additionally, we could use our technique to study asymmetries within chiral molecules: those that have a left and right-handed version.”


The conclusion represents the culmination of roughly 20 years of research on molecular deceleration, according to Ben Sauer, a physicist at Imperial College in the United Kingdom who was not involved in the current work. He believes it will have a significant influence on eEDM precision measurements, since the measurement resolution is directly related to the time available to probe the molecules. In terms of broader implications, Sauer says: “I can see it being applied to some special cases. I think the limit is that there is a lot more interest in light molecules than heavy ones, since most of chemistry takes place at the top of the periodic table. But it is really good for physics investigations.”


Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post