255 research outputs found
Electrostatic deflection of the water molecule: A fundamental asymmetric rotor.
An inhomogeneous electric field is used to study the deflection of a supersonic beam of water molecules. The deflection profiles show strong broadening accompanied by a small net displacement towards higher electric fields. The profiles are in excellent agreement with a calculation of rotational Stark shifts. The molecular rotational temperature being the only adjustable parameter, beam deflection is found to offer an accurate and practical means of determining this quantity. A pair of especially strongly responding rotational sublevels, adding up to ≈25% of the total beam intensity, are readily separated by deflection, making them potentially useful for further electrostatic manipulation. © 2007 The American Physical Society
QCD Sum Rule Analysis of Heavy Quarkonium Hybrids
We have studied the charmonium and bottomonium hybrid states with various
quantum numbers in QCD sum rules. At leading order in , the
two-point correlation functions have been calculated up to dimension six
including the tri-gluon condensate and four-quark condensate. After performing
the QCD sum rule analysis, we have confirmed that the dimension six condensates
can stabilize the hybrid sum rules and allow the reliable mass predictions. We
have updated the mass spectra of the charmonium and bottomonium hybrid states
and identified that the negative-parity states with form the lightest hybrid supermultiplet while the positive-parity
states with belong to a heavier hybrid
supermultiplet.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figures. Some minor edits have been made. Presentation at
the DPF 2013 Meeting of the American Physical Society Division of Particles
and Fields, Santa Cruz, California, August 13-17, 201
Exploring the Spectrum of Heavy Quarkonium Hybrids with QCD Sum Rules
QCD Laplace sum rules are used to calculate heavy quarkonium (charmonium and
bottomonium) hybrid masses in several distinct channels. Previous
studies of heavy quarkonium hybrids did not include the effects of
dimension-six condensates, leading to unstable sum rules and unreliable mass
predictions in some channels. We have updated these sum rules to include
dimension-six condensates, providing new mass predictions for the spectra of
heavy quarkonium hybrids. We confirm the finding of other approaches that the
negative-parity states form the lightest hybrid
supermultiplet and the positive-parity
states are members of a heavier supermultiplet. Our results disfavor a pure
charmonium hybrid interpretation of the , in agreement with previous
work.Comment: Presented by RTK at the Theory Canada 9 Conference, held at Wilfrid
Laurier University in June 2014. Submitted for the conference proceedings to
be published in the Canadian Journal of Physics. 5 pages, 1 figure. Version
2: reference added, typo correcte
High-resolution Laser Spectroscopy of NO2 just above the X2 A1-A2B conical intersection: Transitions of K_=1 stacks
The complexity of the absorption spectrum of NO2NO2 can be attributed to a conical intersection of the potential energy surfaces of the two lowest electronic states, the electronic ground state of 2A12A1 symmetry and the first electronically excited state of 2B22B2 symmetry. In a previous paper we reported on the feasibility of using the hyperfine splittings, specifically the Fermi-contact interaction, to determine the electronic ground state character of the excited vibronic states in the region just above the conical intersection; 10 000 to 14 000 cm−114 000 cm−1 above the electronic ground state. High-resolution spectra of a number of vibronic bands in this region were measured by exciting a supersonically cooled beam of NO2NO2 molecules with a narrow-band Ti:Sapphire ring laser. The energy absorbed by the molecules was detected by the use of a bolometer. In the region of interest, rovibronic interactions play no significant role, with the possible exception of the vibronic band at 12 658 cm−1,12 658 cm−1, so that the fine- and hyperfine structure of each rotational transition could be analyzed by using an effective Hamiltonian. In the previous paper we restricted ourselves to an analysis of transitions of the K⎯=0K−=0 stack. In the present paper we extend the analysis to transitions of the K⎯=1K−=1 stack, from which, in addition to hyperfine coupling constants, values of the AA rotational constants of the excited NO2NO2 molecules can be determined. Those rotational constants also contain information about the electronic composition of the vibronic states, and, moreover, about the geometry of the NO2NO2 molecule in the excited state of interest. The results of our analyses are compared with those obtained by other authors. The conclusion arrived at in our previous paper that determining Fermi-constants is useful to help characterize the vibronic bands, is corroborated. In addition, the AA rotational constants correspond to geometries that are consistent with the electronic composition of the relevant excited states as expected from the Fermi-constants
Water vapor at a translational temperature of one kelvin
We report the creation of a confined slow beam of heavy-water (D2O) molecules
with a translational temperature around 1 kelvin. This is achieved by filtering
slow D2O from a thermal ensemble with inhomogeneous static electric fields
exploiting the quadratic Stark shift of D2O. All previous demonstrations of
electric field manipulation of cold dipolar molecules rely on a predominantly
linear Stark shift. Further, on the basis of elementary molecular properties
and our filtering technique we argue that our D2O beam contains molecules in
only a few ro-vibrational states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Adiabatic orientation of rotating dipole molecules in an external field
The induced polarization of a beam of polar clusters or molecules passing
through an electric or magnetic field region differs from the textbook
Langevin-Debye susceptibility. This distinction, which is important for the
interpretation of deflection and focusing experiments, arises because instead
of acquiring thermal equilibrium in the field region, the beam ensemble
typically enters the field adiabatically, i.e., with a previously fixed
distribution of rotational states. We discuss the orientation of rigid
symmetric-top systems with a body-fixed electric or magnetic dipole moment. The
analytical expression for their "adiabatic-entry" orientation is elucidated and
compared with exact numerical results for a range of parameters. The
differences between the polarization of thermodynamic and "adiabatic-entry"
ensembles, of prolate and oblate tops, and of symmetric-top and linear rotators
are illustrated and identified.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Mass Spectrum of Heavy Quarkonium Hybrids
We have extended the calculation of the correlation functions of heavy
quarkonium hybrid operators with various quantum numbers to include
QCD condensates up to dimension six. In contrast to previous analyses which
were unable to optimize the QCD sum-rules for certain , recent work has
shown that inclusion of dimension six condensates stabilizes the hybrid
sum-rules and permits reliable mass predictions. In this work we have
investigated the effects of the dimension six condensates on the remaining
channels. After performing the QCD sum-rule analysis, we update the mass
spectra of charmonium and bottomonium hybrids with exotic and non-exotic
quantum numbers. We identify that the negative-parity states with form the lightest hybrid supermultiplet while the
positive-parity states with belong to a
heavier hybrid supermultiplet, confirming the supermultiplet structure found in
other approaches. The hybrid with has a much higher mass which
may suggest a different excitation of the gluonic field compared to other
channels. In agreement with previous results, we find that the
charmonium hybrid is substantially heavier than the X(3872), which seems to
preclude a pure charmonium hybrid interpretation for this state.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 4 table
Theoretical description of adiabatic laser alignment and mixed-field orientation: the need for a non-adiabatic model
We present a theoretical study of recent laser-alignment and
mixed-field-orientation experiments of asymmetric top molecules. In these
experiments, pendular states were created using linearly polarized strong ac
electric fields from pulsed lasers in combination with weak electrostatic
fields. We compare the outcome of our calculations with experimental results
obtained for the prototypical large molecule benzonitrile (CHN) [J.L.
Hansen et al, Phys. Rev. A, 83, 023406 (2011)] and explore the directional
properties of the molecular ensemble for several field configurations, i.e.,
for various field strengths and angles between ac and dc fields. For
perpendicular fields one obtains pure alignment, which is well reproduced by
the simulations. For tilted fields, we show that a fully adiabatic description
of the process does not reproduce the experimentally observed orientation, and
it is mandatory to use a diabatic model for population transfer between
rotational states. We develop such a model and compare its outcome to the
experimental data confirming the importance of non-adiabatic processes in the
field-dressed molecular dynamics.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
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