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Dive into the research topics where Bart H. McGuyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Bart H. McGuyer.


Nature Physics | 2015

Precise study of asymptotic physics with subradiant ultracold molecules

Bart H. McGuyer; Mickey McDonald; Geoffrey Iwata; Marco G. Tarallo; Wojciech Skomorowski; Robert Moszynski; Tanya Zelevinsky

An experimental study characterizes subradiance—inhibited emission due to destructive interference—in ultracold molecules close to the dissociation limit and shows that it could be used for precision molecular spectroscopy. Weakly bound molecules have physical properties without atomic analogues, even as the bond length approaches dissociation. For instance, the internal symmetries of homonuclear diatomic molecules result in the formation of two-body superradiant and subradiant excited states. Whereas superradiance1,2,3 has been demonstrated in a variety of systems, subradiance4,5,6 is more elusive owing to the inherently weak interaction with the environment. Here we characterize the properties of deeply subradiant molecular states with intrinsic quality factors exceeding 1013 via precise optical spectroscopy with the longest molecule–light coherent interaction times to date. We find that two competing effects limit the lifetimes of the subradiant molecules, with different asymptotic behaviours. The first is radiative decay via weak magnetic-dipole and electric-quadrupole interactions. We prove that its rate increases quadratically with the bond length, confirming quantum mechanical predictions. The second is non-radiative decay through weak gyroscopic predissociation, with a rate proportional to the vibrational mode spacing and sensitive to short-range physics. This work bridges the gap between atomic and molecular metrology based on lattice-clock techniques7, enhancing our understanding of long-range interatomic interactions.


Science Advances | 2016

A broadband chip-scale optical frequency synthesizer at 2.7 × 10−16 relative uncertainty

Shu-Wei Huang; Jinghui Yang; Mingbin Yu; Bart H. McGuyer; Dim-Lee Kwong; Tanya Zelevinsky; Chee Wei Wong

Frequency stabilization to 0.3 parts per quadrillion is demonstrated on chip, opening new frontiers in precision metrology. Optical frequency combs—coherent light sources that connect optical frequencies with microwave oscillations—have become the enabling tool for precision spectroscopy, optical clockwork, and attosecond physics over the past decades. Current benchmark systems are self-referenced femtosecond mode-locked lasers, but Kerr nonlinear dynamics in high-Q solid-state microresonators has recently demonstrated promising features as alternative platforms. The advance not only fosters studies of chip-scale frequency metrology but also extends the realm of optical frequency combs. We report the full stabilization of chip-scale optical frequency combs. The microcomb’s two degrees of freedom, one of the comb lines and the native 18-GHz comb spacing, are simultaneously phase-locked to known optical and microwave references. Active comb spacing stabilization improves long-term stability by six orders of magnitude, reaching a record instrument-limited residual instability of 3.6mHz/τ. Comparing 46 nitride frequency comb lines with a fiber laser frequency comb, we demonstrate the unprecedented microcomb tooth-to-tooth relative frequency uncertainty down to 50 mHz and 2.7 × 10−16, heralding novel solid-state applications in precision spectroscopy, coherent communications, and astronomical spectrography.Optical frequency combs, coherent light sources that connect optical frequencies with microwave oscillations, have become the enabling tool for precision spectroscopy, optical clockwork and attosecond physics over the past decades. Current benchmark systems are self-referenced femtosecond mode-locked lasers, but four-wave-mixing in high-Q resonators have emerged as alternative platforms. Here we report the generation and full stabilization of CMOS-compatible optical frequency combs. The spiral microcombs two degrees-of-freedom, one of the comb line and the native 18 GHz comb spacing, are first simultaneously phase-locked to known optical and microwave references. Second, with pump power control, active comb spacing stabilization improves the long-term stability by six orders-of-magnitude, reaching an instrument-limited 3.6 mHz/sqrt(t) residual instability. Third, referencing thirty-three of the nitride frequency comb lines against a fiber comb, we demonstrate the comb tooth-to-tooth frequency relative inaccuracy down to 53 mHz and 2.8x10-16, heralding unprecedented chip-scale applications in precision spectroscopy, coherent communications, and astronomical spectrography.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Nonadiabatic Effects in Ultracold Molecules via Anomalous Linear and Quadratic Zeeman Shifts

Bart H. McGuyer; C. B. Osborn; Mickey McDonald; G. Reinaudi; Wojciech Skomorowski; Robert Moszynski; Tanya Zelevinsky

Anomalously large linear and quadratic Zeeman shifts are measured for weakly bound ultracold 88Sr2 molecules near the intercombination-line asymptote. Nonadiabatic Coriolis coupling and the nature of long-range molecular potentials explain how this effect arises and scales roughly cubically with the size of the molecule. The linear shifts yield nonadiabatic mixing angles of the molecular states. The quadratic shifts are sensitive to nearby opposite f-parity states and exhibit fourth-order corrections, providing a stringent test of a state-of-the-art ab initio model.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Thermometry via Light Shifts in Optical Lattices

Mickey McDonald; Bart H. McGuyer; Geoffrey Iwata; Tanya Zelevinsky

For atoms or molecules in optical lattices, conventional thermometry methods are often unsuitable due to low particle numbers or a lack of cycling transitions. However, a differential spectroscopic light shift can map temperature onto the line shape with a low sensitivity to trap anharmonicity. We study narrow molecular transitions to demonstrate precise frequency-based lattice thermometry, as well as carrier cooling. This approach should be applicable down to nanokelvin temperatures. We also discuss how the thermal light shift can affect the accuracy of optical lattice clocks.


Nature | 2016

Photodissociation of ultracold diatomic strontium molecules with quantum state control.

Mickey McDonald; Bart H. McGuyer; Florian Apfelbeck; C. H. Lee; I. Majewska; Robert Moszynski; Tanya Zelevinsky

Chemical reactions at ultracold temperatures are expected to be dominated by quantum mechanical effects. Although progress towards ultracold chemistry has been made through atomic photoassociation, Feshbach resonances and bimolecular collisions, these approaches have been limited by imperfect quantum state selectivity. In particular, attaining complete control of the ground or excited continuum quantum states has remained a challenge. Here we achieve this control using photodissociation, an approach that encodes a wealth of information in the angular distribution of outgoing fragments. By photodissociating ultracold 88Sr2 molecules with full control of the low-energy continuum, we access the quantum regime of ultracold chemistry, observing resonant and nonresonant barrier tunnelling, matter–wave interference of reaction products and forbidden reaction pathways. Our results illustrate the failure of the traditional quasiclassical model of photodissociation and instead are accurately described by a quantum mechanical model. The experimental ability to produce well-defined quantum continuum states at low energies will enable high-precision studies of long-range molecular potentials for which accurate quantum chemistry models are unavailable, and may serve as a source of entangled states and coherent matter waves for a wide range of experiments in quantum optics.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Control of Optical Transitions with Magnetic Fields in Weakly Bound Molecules.

Bart H. McGuyer; Mickey McDonald; Geoffrey Iwata; Wojciech Skomorowski; Robert Moszynski; Tanya Zelevinsky

In weakly bound diatomic molecules, energy levels are closely spaced and thus more susceptible to mixing by magnetic fields than in the constituent atoms. We use this effect to control the strengths of forbidden optical transitions in (88)Sr2 over 5 orders of magnitude with modest fields by taking advantage of the intercombination-line threshold. The physics behind this remarkable tunability is accurately explained with both a simple model and quantum chemistry calculations, and suggests new possibilities for molecular clocks. We show how mixed quantization in an optical lattice can simplify molecular spectroscopy. Furthermore, our observation of formerly inaccessible f-parity excited states offers an avenue for improving theoretical models of divalent-atom dimers.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

High-precision spectroscopy of ultracold molecules in an optical lattice

Bart H. McGuyer; Mickey McDonald; Geoffrey Iwata; M. G. Tarallo; Florian Apfelbeck; Tanya Zelevinsky

The study of ultracold molecules tightly trapped in an optical lattice can expand the frontier of precision measurement and spectroscopy, and provide a deeper insight into molecular and fundamental physics. Here we create, probe, and image microkelvin


PLOS ONE | 2014

Paul Drude's Prediction of Nonreciprocal Mutual Inductance for Tesla Transformers

Bart H. McGuyer

^{88}


American Journal of Physics | 2014

Visible optical beats at the hertz level

Mickey McDonald; Jiyoun Ha; Bart H. McGuyer; Tanya Zelevinsky

Sr


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Control of Ultracold Photodissociation with Magnetic Fields

Mickey McDonald; I. Majewska; C. H. Lee; S. S. Kondov; Bart H. McGuyer; Robert Moszynski; Tanya Zelevinsky

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Chee Wei Wong

University of California

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Jinghui Yang

University of California

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