Photoassociation of ultracold atoms induced by chirped picosecond pulses is analyzed in a non-perturbative treatment by following the wavepacket dynamics on the ground and excited surfaces. The initial state is described by a Boltzmann distribution of stationary continuum states. The chosen example is photoassociation of cesium atoms at temperature $T=54~\mu$K from the $a^3 \Sigma_u^+(6s,6s)$ continuum to bound levels in the external well of the $0_g^-(6s+6p_{3/2})$ potential. We study how the modification of the pulse characteristics (carrier frequency, duration, linear chirp rate and intensity) can enhance the number of photoassociated molecules and suggest ways of optimizing the production of stable molecules
We propose a new possibility to form ultracold molecules, via photoassociation of a pair of cold ato...
We have observed the transition from the free colliding pair of cesium atoms into the outer well of ...
The creation of ultracold molecules is currently limited to diatomic species. In this letter we pres...
This theoretical paper presents numerical calculations for photoassociation of ultracold cesium atom...
Most of the experiments on photoassociation of cold atoms and formation of cold molecules are using ...
This theoretical paper investigates the formation of ground state molecules from ultracold cesium at...
In a photoassociation process, two colliding cold cesium atoms absorb one photon to form an ultracol...
The paper contains a time-dependent investigation of the tunneling effect observed in the photoassoc...
The methods producing cold molecules from cold atoms tend to leave molecular ensembles with substant...
The establishment of robust laser-cooling techniques for the formation of ultracold atoms has provid...
In the ultracold regime, where the interactions between atoms become quantum mechanical in nature, w...
[1] A. Fioretti, D. Comparat, A. Crubellier, O. Dulieu, F. Masnou-Seeuws, P. Pillet, submitted to Ph...
Photoassociation is the process in which two colliding atoms absorb a photon to form an excited mole...
We present results on the effects of nanosecond-timescale frequency-chirped laser light on the forma...
The development of the field of the science of ultra-cold matter has opened some exciting possibilit...
We propose a new possibility to form ultracold molecules, via photoassociation of a pair of cold ato...
We have observed the transition from the free colliding pair of cesium atoms into the outer well of ...
The creation of ultracold molecules is currently limited to diatomic species. In this letter we pres...
This theoretical paper presents numerical calculations for photoassociation of ultracold cesium atom...
Most of the experiments on photoassociation of cold atoms and formation of cold molecules are using ...
This theoretical paper investigates the formation of ground state molecules from ultracold cesium at...
In a photoassociation process, two colliding cold cesium atoms absorb one photon to form an ultracol...
The paper contains a time-dependent investigation of the tunneling effect observed in the photoassoc...
The methods producing cold molecules from cold atoms tend to leave molecular ensembles with substant...
The establishment of robust laser-cooling techniques for the formation of ultracold atoms has provid...
In the ultracold regime, where the interactions between atoms become quantum mechanical in nature, w...
[1] A. Fioretti, D. Comparat, A. Crubellier, O. Dulieu, F. Masnou-Seeuws, P. Pillet, submitted to Ph...
Photoassociation is the process in which two colliding atoms absorb a photon to form an excited mole...
We present results on the effects of nanosecond-timescale frequency-chirped laser light on the forma...
The development of the field of the science of ultra-cold matter has opened some exciting possibilit...
We propose a new possibility to form ultracold molecules, via photoassociation of a pair of cold ato...
We have observed the transition from the free colliding pair of cesium atoms into the outer well of ...
The creation of ultracold molecules is currently limited to diatomic species. In this letter we pres...