50th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics APS Meeting
Volume 64, Number 4
Monday–Friday, May 27–31, 2019;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Session W02: Hot Topics
10:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Friday, May 31, 2019
Wisconsin Center
Room: 101AB
Chair: John Bollinger, NIST Boulder
Abstract: W02.00002 : Quantum-Logic Control and High-Resolution Spectroscopy of a Single Molecular Ion
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Chin-Wen Chou
(NIST)
We demonstrate coherent quantum state manipulation and precision spectroscopy of a molecular ion,
based on quantum-logic spectroscopy [1-5]. Information regarding the states of a CaH + ion is transferred
to a co-trapped Ca + ion using the coupled harmonic motion as an information bus and read out via state-
dependent fluorescence detection without disturbing the molecular state. We can thus initialize the
molecular ion in a pure quantum state in a probabilistic but heralded fashion [2, 3, 5]. The THz rotational
transitions between states with different principal rotational quantum number J are directly probed with a
frequency comb [2, 3] with sub-500 Hz spectroscopic linewidths, and improvement to the sub-Hz level
seems feasible [6]. Coherent Rabi flopping is observed between different rotational J-manifolds. The
initial and final states of the transitions, separated by J = 2, can both be nondestructively detected [2-5],
which facilitates unambiguous assignment of the observed signal to the corresponding rotational
transitions. We have also started exploring entanglement of a molecular ion with an atomic ion, with
possible applications in quantum information science. We implement quantum logic operations to
produce an entangled state where states of CaH + , either in the same or different rotational manifolds, are
entangled with magnetic sublevels of the S 1/2 and D 5/2 states of Ca + . All of our methods can be extended to
investigate and exploit coherent rotational-vibrational transitions of a large class of diatomic and
polyatomic molecules in the optical and infrared domains. In collaboration with Y. Lin, A. Collopy, C.
Kurz, T. Fortier, S. Diddams, D. Leibfried, and D. Leibrandt. [1] P. O. Schmidt et al., Science 309, 749
(2005). [2] D. Leibfried, New J. Phys. 14, 023029 (2012). [3] S. Ding and D. N. Matsukevich, New J.
Phys. 14, 023028 (2012). [4] F. Wolf et al., Nature 530, 457 (2016). [5] C. W. Chou et al., Nature 545,
203 (2017). [6] A. Bartels et al., Opt. Lett. 29, 1081 (2004).