Toward Cavity-Enabled Non-Destructive Readout of Molecular States

POSTER

Abstract

Molecules are powerful probes for precision measurements and searches for new physics, including tests of discrete symmetries, and detection of dark matter and new fundamental forces. Their rich internal structure also makes them attractive for applications in metrology, quantum simulation, and quantum computing. While major progress has been made in the production, cooling, trapping and coherent manipulation of molecules, optical cavities, widely used in atomic systems for sensitive and non-destructive readout, remain largely unexplored in molecular experiments. Here we adapt theoretical models of light-atom interaction in optical cavities to perform numerical simulations of the response of SrF molecules coupled to a cavity. We show that near-concentric cavities with a wide range of finesse can provide measurement uncertainties below the standard quantum limit (SQL). Moreover, we show that a high cavity-molecule detuning allows for non-destructive state readout in a fast timescale in the order of milliseconds. These results define design targets for implementing cavity-based, non-destructive readout in molecular systems and motivate ongoing experimental efforts toward cavity QED with cold molecules.

Publication: Non-destructive cavity readout of molecules for precision measurements

Presenters

  • Alejandro M Salas-Estrada

    • University of Florida

Authors

  • Alejandro M Salas-Estrada

    • University of Florida
  • Silviu-Marian M Udrescu

    • University of Chicago
  • Sepehr Ebadi

    • MIT/Harvard
  • Arian Jadbabaie

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University
  • Geoffrey Zheng

    • University of Chicago
  • Qian Wang

    • University of Chicago
  • Vladan Vuletić

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Department of Physics and Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT
    • MIT
  • David DeMille

    • University of Chicago
    • Johns Hopkins University
    • Johns Hopkins University, Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago
  • Ronald Fernando Garcia Ruiz

    • MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT
  • Edwin Pedrozo-Penafiel

    • University of Florida