5 - Photoassociation spectroscopy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
Summary
Introduction
If, while approaching on an unbound ground-state potential, two atoms absorb a photon and couple to an excited bound molecular state, they are said to undergo photoassociation. Figure 5.1 illustrates the process. At long range electrostatic dispersion forces give rise to the ground-state molecular potential varying as C6/R6. If the two atoms are homonuclear, then a resonant dipole–dipole interaction sets up ±C3/R3 excited-state repulsive and attractive potentials. Figure 5.2 shows the actual long-range excited potential curves for the sodium dimer, originating from the 2S½ + 2P3/2 and 2S½ + 2P½ separated atom states. For cold and ultracold photoassociation processes the long-range attractive potentials play the key role; the repulsive potentials figure importantly in optical shielding and suppression, the subject of Chapter 6. In the presence of a photon with frequency ωp the colliding pair with kinetic energy kBT couples from the ground-state to the attractive molecular state in a free–bound transition near the Condon point RC, the point at which the difference potential just matches ћωp.
Scanning the probe laser ωp excites population of vibration–rotation states in the excited bound potential and generates a free–bound spectrum. This general class of measurements is called photoassociative spectroscopy (PAS) and can be observed in several different ways. The observation may consist of bound-state decay by spontaneous emission, most probably as the nuclei move slowly around the outer turning point, to some distribution of continuum states on the ground potential controlled by bound–free nuclear Franck–Condon overlap factors.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003