Novel corkscrew-laser technique can send molecules spinning rapidly about a selected axis
Modified optical centrifuge has potential to open up new ways for the study of superrotors
DESY
Optical centrifuges, built from rotating laser pulses, can make molecules spin faster than ten trillion times per second. These molecular superrotors have revealed unexpected behaviours and are interesting quantities for studies of scattering, spectroscopy, and dynamics. Superrotors can bring in significant energy into collisions and, at the same time, behave like tiny little gyroscopes that are more resistant to collisions and reorientation.
“Controlling ultrafast rotational motion of molecules has seen tremendous progress in recent years thanks to the development of innovative techniques in strong-field laser physics,” says Owens, who is also affiliated with the Hamburg Center for Ultrafast Imaging CUI. Existing optical centrifuges always trap molecules along the axis where the electric charges of the molecule can most easily be shaken around to form a so-called dipole. The molecule’s axis then follows the rotating laser field and starts spinning faster and faster.
The CMI team now developed a method that uses a corkscrew laser that is repeatedly turned on and off. This modified optical centrifuge allows the axis about which the molecule rotates to be selected. Using the example of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), the study demonstrates how the rotation of asymmetric molecules can be controlled, choosing between two distinct molecular axes. Turning the corkscrew laser on and off can be achieved by adding a modifying pulse envelope that is superimposed to the laser field. This way the molecules can be excited along different pathways of rotational states, ultimately leading to rotation about one of two different axes.
“Such a scheme to control the angular momentum alignment of a molecule will be useful in studies of molecule-molecule or molecule-surface scattering, where you can change the outcome and study the stereodynamics of a scattering event by controlling the rotation axis,” explains Yachmenev. Equally beneficial is the large amount of energy associated with superrotors, which can be controlled by changing the duration of the optical centrifuge pulse.
CFEL is a cooperation of DESY, the Max Planck Society and Universität Hamburg. CUI is a Cluster of Excellence at Universität Hamburg within the German federal excellence strategy.
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