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Dive into the research topics where Matthew T. Hummon is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew T. Hummon.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

2D Magneto-Optical Trapping of Diatomic Molecules

Matthew T. Hummon; Mark Yeo; Benjamin Stuhl; Alejandra Collopy; Yong Xia; J. Ye

We demonstrate one- and two-dimensional transverse laser cooling and magneto-optical trapping of the polar molecule yttrium (II) oxide (YO). In a 1D magneto-optical trap (MOT), we characterize the magneto-optical trapping force and decrease the transverse temperature by an order of magnitude, from 25 to 2 mK, limited by interaction time. In a 2D MOT, we enhance the intensity of the YO beam and reduce the transverse temperature in both transverse directions. The approach demonstrated here can be applied to many molecular species and can also be extended to 3D.


Nature | 2012

Evaporative cooling of the dipolar hydroxyl radical

Benjamin Stuhl; Matthew T. Hummon; Mark Yeo; Goulven Quéméner; John L. Bohn; J. Ye

Atomic physics was revolutionized by the development of forced evaporative cooling, which led directly to the observation of Bose–Einstein condensation, quantum-degenerate Fermi gases and ultracold optical lattice simulations of condensed-matter phenomena. More recently, substantial progress has been made in the production of cold molecular gases. Their permanent electric dipole moment is expected to generate systems with varied and controllable phases, dynamics and chemistry. However, although advances have been made in both direct cooling and cold-association techniques, evaporative cooling has not been achieved so far. This is due to unfavourable ratios of elastic to inelastic scattering and impractically slow thermalization rates in the available trapped species. Here we report the observation of microwave-forced evaporative cooling of neutral hydroxyl (OH•) molecules loaded from a Stark-decelerated beam into an extremely high-gradient magnetic quadrupole trap. We demonstrate cooling by at least one order of magnitude in temperature, and a corresponding increase in phase-space density by three orders of magnitude, limited only by the low-temperature sensitivity of our spectroscopic thermometry technique. With evaporative cooling and a sufficiently large initial population, much colder temperatures are possible; even a quantum-degenerate gas of this dipolar radical (or anything else it can sympathetically cool) may be within reach.


Nature | 2004

Magnetic trapping of rare-earth atoms at millikelvin temperatures

Cindy Hancox; S. Charles Doret; Matthew T. Hummon; Linjiao Luo; John M. Doyle

The ability to create quantum degenerate gases has led to the realization of Bose–Einstein condensation of molecules, atom–atom entanglement and the accurate measurement of the Casimir force in atom–surface interactions. With a few exceptions, the achievement of quantum degeneracy relies on evaporative cooling of magnetically trapped atoms to ultracold temperatures. Magnetic traps confine atoms whose electronic magnetic moments are aligned anti-parallel to the magnetic field. This alignment must be preserved during the collisional thermalization of the atomic cloud. Quantum degeneracy has been reached in spherically symmetric, S-state atoms (atoms with zero internal orbital angular momentum). However, collisional relaxation of the atomic magnetic moments of non-S-state atoms (non-spherical atoms with non-zero internal orbital angular momentum) is thought to proceed rapidly. Here we demonstrate magnetic trapping of non-S-state rare-earth atoms, observing a suppression of the interaction anisotropy in collisions. The atoms behave effectively like S-state atoms because their unpaired electrons are shielded by two outer filled electronic shells that are spherically symmetric. Our results are promising for the creation of quantum degenerate gases with non-S-state atoms, and may facilitate the search for time variation of fundamental constants and the development of a quantum computer with highly magnetic atoms.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Cold heteromolecular dipolar collisions

Brian C. Sawyer; Benjamin Stuhl; Mark Yeo; Timur V. Tscherbul; Matthew T. Hummon; Yong Xia; Jacek Kłos; David Patterson; John M. Doyle; J. Ye

Cold molecules promise to reveal a rich set of novel collision dynamics in the low-energy regime. By combining for the first time the techniques of Stark deceleration, magnetic trapping, and cryogenic buffer gas cooling, we present the first experimental observation of cold collisions between two different species of state-selected neutral polar molecules. This has enabled an absolute measurement of the total trap loss cross sections between OH and ND(3) at a mean collision energy of 3.6 cm(-1) (5 K). Due to the dipolar interaction, the total cross section increases upon application of an external polarizing electric field. Cross sections computed from ab initio potential energy surfaces are in agreement with the measured value at zero external electric field. The theory presented here represents the first such analysis of collisions between a (2)Π radical and a closed-shell polyatomic molecule.


Annual Review of Physical Chemistry | 2014

Cold State-Selected Molecular Collisions and Reactions

Benjamin Stuhl; Matthew T. Hummon; J. Ye

Over the past decade, and particularly the past five years, a quiet revolution has been building at the border between atomic physics and experimental quantum chemistry. The rapid development of techniques for producing cold and even ultracold molecules without a perturbing rare-gas cluster shell is now enabling the study of chemical reactions and scattering at the quantum scattering limit with only a few partial waves contributing to the incident channel. Moreover, the ability to perform these experiments with nonthermal distributions comprising one or a few specific states enables the observation and even full control of state-to-state collision rates in this computation-friendly regime: This is perhaps the most elementary study possible of scattering and reaction dynamics.


Physical Review A | 2008

Magnetic Trapping of Atomic Nitrogen (\(^{14}\)N) and Cotrapping of NH (\(X\)\(^{3}\)\(\Sigma\) -)

Matthew T. Hummon; Wesley C. Campbell; Hsin-I Lu; Edem Tsikata; Yihua Wang; John M. Doyle

Author(s): Hummon, MT; Campbell, WC; Lu, HI; Tsikata, E; Wang, Y; Doyle, JM | Abstract: We observe magnetic trapping of atomic nitrogen (N14) and cotrapping of ground-state imidogen (N14 H, X Σ-3). Both are loaded directly from a room-temperature beam via buffer gas cooling. We trap approximately 1× 1011 N14 atoms at a peak density of 5× 1011 cm-3 at 550 mK. The 12±4 s 1/e lifetime of atomic nitrogen in the trap is consistent with a model for loss of atoms over the edge of the trap in the presence of helium buffer gas. Cotrapping of N14 and N14 H is accomplished, with 108 NH trapped molecules at a peak density of 108 cm-3.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Rotational State Microwave Mixing for Laser Cooling of Complex Diatomic Molecules

Mark Yeo; Matthew T. Hummon; Alejandra Collopy; Bo Yan; Boerge Hemmerling; Eunmi Chae; John M. Doyle; J. Ye

We demonstrate the mixing of rotational states in the ground electronic state using microwave radiation to enhance optical cycling in the molecule yttrium (II) monoxide (YO). This mixing technique is used in conjunction with a frequency modulated and chirped continuous wave laser to slow longitudinally a cryogenic buffer-gas beam of YO. We generate a flux of YO below 10 m/s, directly loadable into a three-dimensional magneto-optical trap. This technique opens the door for laser cooling of diatomic molecules with more complex loss channels due to intermediate states.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Magnetic trapping of NH molecules with 20 s lifetimes

Edem Tsikata; Wesley C. Campbell; Matthew T. Hummon; Hsin-I Lu; John M. Doyle

Buffer gas cooling is used to trap NH molecules with 1/e lifetimes exceeding 20 s. Helium vapor generated by laser desorption of a helium film is employed to thermalize 10 5 molecules at a temperature of 500 mK in a 3.9 T magnetic trap. Long molecule trapping times are attained through rapid pumpout of residual buffer gas. Molecules experience a helium background gas density below 1 × 10 12 cm −3 . Contents


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Cold N+NH collisions in a magnetic trap

Matthew T. Hummon; Timur V. Tscherbul; Jacek Kłos; Hsin-I Lu; Edem Tsikata; Wesley C. Campbell; Alexander Dalgarno; John M. Doyle

We present an experimental and theoretical study of atom-molecule collisions in a mixture of cold, trapped N atoms and NH molecules at a temperature of ∼600  mK. We measure a small N+NH trap loss rate coefficient of k(loss)(N+NH)=9(5)(3)×10(-13)  cm(3) s(-1). Accurate quantum scattering calculations based on ab initio interaction potentials are in agreement with experiment and indicate the magnetic dipole interaction to be the dominant loss mechanism. Our theory further indicates the ratio of N+NH elastic-to-inelastic collisions remains large (>100) into the mK regime.


Physical Review A | 2012

Microwave state transfer and adiabatic dynamics of magnetically trapped polar molecules

Benjamin Stuhl; Mark Yeo; Brian C. Sawyer; Matthew T. Hummon; J. Ye

Cold and ultracold polar molecules with nonzero electronic angular momentum are of great interest for studies in quantum chemistry and control, investigations of novel quantum systems, and precision measurement. However, in mixed electric and magnetic fields, these molecules are generically subject to a large set of avoided crossings among their Zeeman sublevels; in magnetic traps, these crossings lead to distorted potentials and trap loss from electric bias fields. We have characterized these crossings in OH by microwave-transferring trapped OH molecules from the upper |f; M = +3/2> parity state to the lower |e; +3/2> state and observing their trap dynamics under an applied electric bias field. Our observations are very well described by a simple Landau-Zener model, yielding insight to the rich spectra and dynamics of polar radicals in mixed external fields.

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J. Ye

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Mark Yeo

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Benjamin Stuhl

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Alejandra Collopy

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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John Kitching

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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