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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Prehn is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Prehn.


Nature | 2012

Sisyphus cooling of electrically trapped polyatomic molecules

Martin Zeppenfeld; Barbara G. U. Englert; Rosa Glöckner; Alexander Prehn; Manuel Mielenz; Laurens D. van Buuren; Michael Motsch; Gerhard Rempe

Polar molecules have a rich internal structure and long-range dipole–dipole interactions, making them useful for quantum-controlled applications and fundamental investigations. Their potential fully unfolds at ultracold temperatures, where various effects are predicted in many-body physics, quantum information science, ultracold chemistry and physics beyond the standard model. Whereas a wide range of methods to produce cold molecular ensembles have been developed, the cooling of polyatomic molecules (that is, with three or more atoms) to ultracold temperatures has seemed intractable. Here we report the experimental realization of optoelectrical cooling, a recently proposed cooling and accumulation method for polar molecules. Its key attribute is the removal of a large fraction of a molecule’s kinetic energy in each cycle of the cooling sequence via a Sisyphus effect, allowing cooling with only a few repetitions of the dissipative decay process. We demonstrate the potential of optoelectrical cooling by reducing the temperature of about one million CH3F molecules by a factor of 13.5, with the phase-space density increased by a factor of 29 (or a factor of 70 discounting trap losses). In contrast to other cooling mechanisms, our scheme proceeds in a trap, cools in all three dimensions and should work for a large variety of polar molecules. With no fundamental temperature limit anticipated down to the photon-recoil temperature in the nanokelvin range, we expect our method to be able to produce ultracold polyatomic molecules. The low temperatures, large molecule numbers and long trapping times of up to 27 seconds should allow an interaction-dominated regime to be attained, enabling collision studies and investigation of evaporative cooling towards a Bose–Einstein condensate of polyatomic molecules.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Optoelectrical Cooling of Polar Molecules to Submillikelvin Temperatures

Alexander Prehn; Martin Ibrügger; Rosa Glöckner; Gerhard Rempe; Martin Zeppenfeld

We demonstrate direct cooling of gaseous formaldehyde (H2CO) to the microkelvin regime. Our approach, optoelectrical Sisyphus cooling, provides a simple dissipative cooling method applicable to electrically trapped dipolar molecules. By reducing the temperature by 3 orders of magnitude and increasing the phase-space density by a factor of ∼10(4), we generate an ensemble of 3×10(5) molecules with a temperature of about 420  μK, populating a single rotational state with more than 80% purity.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Rotational cooling of trapped polyatomic molecules

Rosa Glöckner; Alexander Prehn; Barbara G. U. Englert; Gerhard Rempe; Martin Zeppenfeld

Controlling the internal degrees of freedom is a key challenge for applications of cold and ultracold molecules. Here, we demonstrate rotational-state cooling of trapped methyl fluoride molecules (CH_{3}F) by optically pumping the population of 16 M sublevels in the rotational states J=3, 4, 5 and 6 into a single level. By combining rotational-state cooling with motional cooling, we increase the relative number of molecules in the state J=4, K=3, M=4 from a few percent to over 70%, thereby generating a translationally cold (≈30  mK) and nearly pure state ensemble of about 10^{6} molecules. Our scheme is extendable to larger sets of initial states, other final states, and a variety of molecule species, thus paving the way for internal-state control of ever-larger molecules.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Rotational state detection of electrically trapped polyatomic molecules

Rosa Glöckner; Alexander Prehn; Gerhard Rempe; Martin Zeppenfeld

Detecting the internal state of polar molecules is a substantial challenge when standard techniques such as resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization or laser-induced fluorescense do not work. As this is the case for most polyatomic molecule species, in this paper we investigate an alternative based on state-selective removal of molecules from an electrically trapped ensemble. Specifically, we deplete molecules by driving rotational and/or vibrational transitions to untrapped states. Fully resolving the rotational state with this method can be a considerable challenge, as the frequency differences between various transitions are easily substantially less than the Stark broadening in an electric trap. However, by using a unique trap design that provides homogeneous fields in a large fraction of the trap volume, we successfully discriminate all rotational quantum numbers, including the rotational M-substate.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2017

Fast, precise, and widely tunable frequency control of an optical parametric oscillator referenced to a frequency comb

Alexander Prehn; Rosa Glöckner; Gerhard Rempe; Martin Zeppenfeld

Optical frequency combs (OFCs) provide a convenient reference for the frequency stabilization of continuous-wave lasers. We demonstrate a frequency control method relying on tracking over a wide range and stabilizing the beat note between the laser and the OFC. The approach combines fast frequency ramps on a millisecond timescale in the entire mode-hop free tuning range of the laser and precise stabilization to single frequencies. We apply it to a commercially available optical parametric oscillator (OPO) and demonstrate tuning over more than 60 GHz with a ramping speed up to 3 GHz/ms. Frequency ramps spanning 15 GHz are performed in less than 10 ms, with the OPO instantly relocked to the OFC after the ramp at any desired frequency. The developed control hardware and software are able to stabilize the OPO to sub-MHz precision and to perform sequences of fast frequency ramps automatically.


7th International Symposium and Young Scientists School on Modern Problems of Laser Physics (MPLP) | 2017

An experimental toolbox for the generation of cold and ultracold polar molecules

Martin Zeppenfeld; Thomas Gantner; Rosa Glöckner; Martin Ibrügger; Manuel Koller; Alexander Prehn; Xing Wu; Sotir Chervenkov; Gerhard Rempe

Cold and ultracold molecules enable fascinating applications in quantum science. We present our toolbox of techniques to generate the required molecule ensembles, including buffergas cooling, centrifuge deceleration and optoelectrical Sisyphus cooling. We obtain excellent control over both the motional and internal molecular degrees of freedom, allowing us to aim at various applications.


Archive | 2018

High-resolution spectroscopy on cold electrically trapped formaldehyde

Alexander Prehn; Martin Ibrügger; Gerhard Rempe; Martin Zeppenfeld


ICAP 2016 The 25th International Conference on Atomic Physics | 2016

An ultracold gas of internal-state controlled polyatomic molecules

Alexander Prehn; Martin Ibrügger; Rosa Glöckner; Martin Zeppenfeld; Gerhard Rempe


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Controlled Ensembles of Formaldehyde Molecules at Ultracold Temperatures

Martin Zeppenfeld; Alexander Prehn; Martin Ibr "ugger; Rosa Gl "ockner; Gerhard Rempe


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Detecting and manipulating the rotational states of trapped polyatomic molecules

Alexander Prehn; Rosa Gl "{o}ckner; Martin Ibr "{u}gger; Martin Zeppenfeld; Gerhard Rempe

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