Kuang Chen
University of California, Los Angeles
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Featured researches published by Kuang Chen.
Nature | 2013
Wade G. Rellergert; Scott T. Sullivan; Steven J. Schowalter; Svetlana Kotochigova; Kuang Chen; Eric R. Hudson
Compared with atoms, molecules have a rich internal structure that offers many opportunities for technological and scientific advancement. The study of this structure could yield critical insights into quantum chemistry, new methods for manipulating quantum information, and improved tests of discrete symmetry violation and fundamental constant variation. Harnessing this potential typically requires the preparation of cold molecules in their quantum rovibrational ground state. However, the molecular internal structure severely complicates efforts to produce such samples. Removal of energy stored in long-lived vibrational levels is particularly problematic because optical transitions between vibrational levels are not governed by strict selection rules, which makes laser cooling difficult. Additionally, traditional collisional, or sympathetic, cooling methods are inefficient at quenching molecular vibrational motion. Here we experimentally demonstrate that the vibrational motion of trapped BaCl+ molecules is quenched by collisions with ultracold calcium atoms at a rate comparable to the classical scattering, or Langevin, rate. This is over four orders of magnitude more efficient than traditional sympathetic cooling schemes. The high cooling rate, a consequence of a strong interaction potential (due to the high polarizability of calcium), along with the low collision energies involved, leads to molecular samples with a vibrational ground-state occupancy of at least 90 per cent. Our demonstration uses a novel thermometry technique that relies on relative photodissociation yields. Although the decrease in vibrational temperature is modest, with straightforward improvements it should be possible to produce molecular samples with a vibrational ground-state occupancy greater than 99 per cent in less than 100 milliseconds. Because sympathetic cooling of molecular rotational motion is much more efficient than vibrational cooling in traditional systems, we expect that the method also allows efficient cooling of the rotational motion of the molecules. Moreover, the technique should work for many different combinations of ultracold atoms and molecules.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012
Steven J. Schowalter; Kuang Chen; Wade G. Rellergert; Scott T. Sullivan; Eric R. Hudson
We demonstrate the integration of a linear quadrupole trap with a simple time-of-flight mass spectrometer with medium-mass resolution (m/Δm ∼ 50) geared towards the demands of atomic, molecular, and chemical physics experiments. By utilizing a novel radial ion extraction scheme from the linear quadrupole trap into the mass analyzer, a device with large trap capacity and high optical access is realized without sacrificing mass resolution. This provides the ability to address trapped ions with laser light and facilitates interactions with neutral background gases prior to analyzing the trapped ions. Here, we describe the construction and implementation of the device as well as present representative ToF spectra. We conclude by demonstrating the flexibility of the device with proof-of-principle experiments that include the observation of molecular-ion photodissociation and the measurement of trapped-ion chemical reaction rates.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Kuang Chen; Scott T. Sullivan; Eric R. Hudson
A single ion immersed in a neutral buffer gas is studied. An analytical model is developed that gives a complete description of the dynamics and steady-state properties of the ions. An extension of this model, using techniques employed in the mathematics of economics and finance, is used to explain the recent observation of non-Maxwellian statistics for these systems. Taken together, these results offer an explanation of the long-standing issues associated with sympathetic cooling of an ion by a neutral buffer gas.
Physical review applied | 2014
Christian Schneider; Steven J. Schowalter; Kuang Chen; Scott T. Sullivan; Eric R. Hudson
Mass spectrometry is a key analytical tool in many disciplines, as it provides accurate identification of unknown chemical components in complex mixtures. The authors demonstrate that using laser cooling significantly increases the phase-space density of this assay, improving both mass resolution and detection limits by better than an order of magnitude.
Nature Communications | 2016
Steven J. Schowalter; Alexander J. Dunning; Kuang Chen; Prateek Puri; Christian Schneider; Eric R. Hudson
Sympathetic cooling of trapped ions through collisions with neutral buffer gases is critical to a variety of modern scientific fields, including fundamental chemistry, mass spectrometry, nuclear and particle physics, and atomic and molecular physics. Despite its widespread use over four decades, there remain open questions regarding its fundamental limitations. To probe these limits, here we examine the steady-state evolution of up to 10 barium ions immersed in a gas of three-million laser-cooled calcium atoms. We observe and explain the emergence of nonequilibrium behaviour as evidenced by bifurcations in the ion steady-state temperature, parameterized by ion number. We show that this behaviour leads to the limitations in creating and maintaining translationally cold samples of trapped ions using neutral-gas sympathetic cooling. These results may provide a route to studying non-equilibrium thermodynamics at the atomic level.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Kuang Chen; Scott T. Sullivan; Wade G. Rellergert; Eric R. Hudson
Samples of ultracold 174Yb+ ions, confined in a linear radio-frequency Paul trap, are heated via micromotion interruption, while their temperature, density, and therefore structural phase are monitored and simulated. The observed time evolution of the ion temperature is compared to a theoretical model for ion-ion heating allowing a direct measurement of the Coulomb logarithm in a linear Paul trap. This result permits a simple, yet accurate, analytical description of ion cloud thermodynamic properties, e.g., density, temperature, and structural phase, as well as suggests limits to and improvements for ongoing trapped-ion quantum information efforts.
international quantum electronics conference | 2011
Wade G. Rellergert; Scott T. Sullivan; Svetlana Kotochigova; Alexander Yu. Petrov; Steven J. Schowalter; Kuang Chen; Eric R. Hudson
Interactions between cold ions and atoms have been proposed for use in implementing quantum gates\cite{Idziaszek2007}, probing quantum gases\cite{Sherkunov2009}, observing novel charge-transport dynamics\cite{Cote2000}, and sympathetically cooling atomic and molecular systems which cannot be laser cooled\cite{Smith2005,Hudson2009}. Furthermore, the chemistry between cold ions and atoms is foundational to issues in modern astrophysics, including the formation of stars, planets, and interstellar clouds\cite{Smith1992}, the diffuse interstellar bands\cite{Reddy2010}, and the post-recombination epoch of the early universe\cite{Stancil1996b}. However, as pointed out in refs 9 and 10, both experimental data and a theoretical description of the ion-atom interaction at low temperatures, reached in these modern atomic physics experiments and the interstellar environment, are still largely missing. Here we observe a chemical reaction between ultracold
conference on lasers and electro-optics | 2011
Kuang Chen; Steven J. Schowalter; Svetlana Kotochigova; Alexander Petrov; Wade G. Rellergert; Scott T. Sullivan; Eric R. Hudson
^{174}
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Wade G. Rellergert; Scott T. Sullivan; Svetlana Kotochigova; Alexander Yu. Petrov; Kuang Chen; Steven J. Schowalter; Eric R. Hudson
Yb
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011
Scott T. Sullivan; Wade G. Rellergert; Svetlana Kotochigova; Kuang Chen; Steven J. Schowalter; Eric R. Hudson
^+