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      Collisions of ultracold molecules in bright and dark optical dipole traps

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          A High Phase-Space-Density Gas of Polar Molecules

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            Quantum computation with trapped polar molecules.

            D DeMille (2002)
            We propose a novel physical realization of a quantum computer. The qubits are electric dipole moments of ultracold diatomic molecules, oriented along or against an external electric field. Individual molecules are held in a 1D trap array, with an electric field gradient allowing spectroscopic addressing of each site. Bits are coupled via the electric dipole-dipole interaction. Using technologies similar to those already demonstrated, this design can plausibly lead to a quantum computer with greater, approximately > or = 10(4) qubits, which can perform approximately 10(5) CNOT gates in the anticipated decoherence time of approximately 5 s.
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              Quantum-state controlled chemical reactions of ultracold potassium-rubidium molecules.

              How does a chemical reaction proceed at ultralow temperatures? Can simple quantum mechanical rules such as quantum statistics, single partial-wave scattering, and quantum threshold laws provide a clear understanding of the molecular reactivity under a vanishing collision energy? Starting with an optically trapped near-quantum-degenerate gas of polar 40K87Rb molecules prepared in their absolute ground state, we report experimental evidence for exothermic atom-exchange chemical reactions. When these fermionic molecules were prepared in a single quantum state at a temperature of a few hundred nanokelvin, we observed p-wave-dominated quantum threshold collisions arising from tunneling through an angular momentum barrier followed by a short-range chemical reaction with a probability near unity. When these molecules were prepared in two different internal states or when molecules and atoms were brought together, the reaction rates were enhanced by a factor of 10 to 100 as a result of s-wave scattering, which does not have a centrifugal barrier. The measured rates agree with predicted universal loss rates related to the two-body van der Waals length.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                PPRHAI
                Physical Review Research
                Phys. Rev. Research
                American Physical Society (APS)
                2643-1564
                July 2021
                July 2 2021
                : 3
                : 3
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.033013
                e4bf9163-3ec0-43cf-a413-d96369a39c59
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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