A theoretical study on laser cooling feasibility of XH (X = As, Sb and Bi): effects of intersystem crossings and spinâorbit couplings†
Abstract
We investigate the low-lying electronic states and feasibility of direct laser cooling of AsH, SbH and BiH by means of the highly accurate ab initio and dynamical methods with the inclusion of the spinâorbit coupling effects. Twelve low-lying Ω states for each of them are computed using the internally contracted multireference configuration interaction method. Our computed spectroscopic constants are in excellent agreement with the available experimental data. The calculated spinâorbit matrix elements are large enough, and thus the intersystem crossings from the A3Î state and the transitions to the a1Î2 state should be considered in laser cooling. We find that, from AsH to BiH, the location of the crossing point between the A3Î and 5ÎŁâ states moves down towards the ground vibrational level of A3Î along with enhanced spinâorbit coupling effects, which increases the difficulty of laser cooling heavier hydrides. An empirical law of âcrossing point shifting downâ down a group in the periodic table is generalized, which may become a helpful caveat when cooling diatomic molecules containing heavier elements. By choosing specific spinâorbit states, we construct feasible laser cooling schemes for AsH and SbH based on the A3Î 2 â X3ÎŁâ1 transitions, which feature very large vibrational branching ratios R00 (AsH: 0.9662; SbH: 0.9248) and short radiative lifetimes (AsH: 914 ns; SbH: 883 ns). In particular, a constructed laser cooling scheme for AsH is able to scatter 1.24 Ă 104 photons, whereas that for SbH can scatter 8.60 Ă 103 photons, which are enough to cool AsH and SbH to the ultracold regime. The present work demonstrates the importance of intersystem crossings and spinâorbit couplings in molecular laser cooling.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Quantum computing and quantum information storage: Celebrating the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics and Quantum Computing and Quantum Information Storage