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At present there is a strong interest within the scientific community to produce and experiment with cold molecules. As standard laser-cooling schemes developed for atomic species cannot be applied to molecules, in the recent past tremendous effort has been put into developing schemes to cool molecules by other means. Several schemes for producing translationally cold and strongly bound neutral molecules in a single quantum state have been demonstrated. These include buffer-gas cooling of magnetic dipolar molecules in magnetic traps15, Stark deceleration and trapping of molecules with permanent16,17 or induced18 electric dipole moments, formation of molecules through Feshbach resonances followed by transfer to the vibrational ground state of electronic molecular potentials by stimulated Raman adiabatic passage schemes19 and photoassociative molecule formation directly in the rovibrational ground state20 or by transfer to the vibrational ground state through the application of shaped femtosecond laser pulses21.

With respect to molecular ions, the well-established technique of buffer-gas cooling is the only method that has so far led to the production of translationally as well as internally cold molecular ions22. Although buffer-gas cooling is simple and generally applicable, it limits both the effective internal and translational temperature to the kelvin range, and owing to frequent collisions with the buffer-gas atoms it prevents strong spatial localization as well as utilization of internal coherences. Sympathetic cooling of trapped molecular ions, through the Coulomb interaction with laser-cooled atomic ions, has, on the other hand, proven highly effective for reaching translational temperatures in the millikelvin range, where the ions become spatially localized in the form of so-called Coulomb crystals23. The sympathetic cooling scheme does, however, not significantly influence the molecular ion’s internal degrees of freedom, owing to the very distant Coulomb interactions within the crystalline structures. For polar molecular ions, this means that the rovibrational degrees of freedom on a timescale of 10–100 s will equilibrate to the temperature of the blackbody radiation (BBR) in the trapping region. Consequently, a significant population in a large number of rovibrational levels will result13,24,25. To solve this problem, several schemes have recently been proposed for internal state preparation of sympathetically cooled molecular ions13,14,26.

Following one of the rotational cooling schemes, here we report on rotational ground-state laser cooling of ensembles of trapped MgH+ molecular ions that are already sympathetically cooled by Mg+ ions to a translational temperature below 100 mK. Owing to the large vibrational constant of the X 1Σ+ electronic ground-state potential of the MgH+ ion, they are furthermore initially in the vibrational ground state (>99.9% probability).

In Fig. 1a, the scheme for rotational laser cooling towards the |v=0,J=0〉X state is sketched. In brief, the scheme is based on a single laser excitation of the |v=0,J=2〉X–|v=1,J=1〉X transition. This excitation effectively transfers population from the |v=0,J=2〉X level to the |v=0,J=0〉X ground state by spontaneous decay from the |v=1,J=1〉X level, either directly to the ground state |v=0,J=0〉X or back to the |v=0,J=2〉X level from where it will be excited again. Although population pumped into the ground state will be transferred step-by-step towards higher lying levels owing to dipole-allowed rotational transitions (ΔJ=±1) induced by BBR, any time the population enters the |v=0,J=2〉X level, it will rather efficiently be pumped back to the ground state. This ‘Sisyphus’-mechanism combined with transfer of population from levels with J>2 towards the |v=0,J=2〉X level through BBR-induced rotational state-changing transitions lead eventually to strong rotational cooling.

Figure 1: Schemes for rotational cooling and for rotational state distribution determination.
figure 1

a, The main rovibrational states (ν is the vibrational quantum number, J is the rotational quantum number and P is the parity of a given state) and electric-dipole-allowed transitions (only ΔJ=±1 owing to parity) involved in the rotational cooling scheme. The straight red arrow indicates laser excitation; wavy arrows represent possible spontaneous decay paths after laser excitation. The blue arrows indicate rovibrational transitions driven by the BBR field. b, The population in a given rotational level |v=0,JX is determined by two-colour 1+1 REMPD of MgH+. The state-selective excitation |v=0,JX–|v=0,J+1〉A (R-branch) or |v=0,JX–|v=0,J−1〉A (P-branch) around 281 nm is marked by the blue arrow, and the dissociating excitation to the C 1Σ+ potential at 266 nm is marked by the purple arrow. a0 represents the Bohr radius.

For determining the rotational state population of the various |v=0,JX levels, a two-colour 1+1 resonance-enhanced multi-photon dissociation (REMPD) technique is applied with the resonant intermediate level being one of the |v=0,J±1〉A levels of the A 1Σ+ potential and dissociation through the C 1Σ+ potential. As can be seen in Fig. 1b, dissociation through the C 1Σ+ potential results in a neutral Mg atom and a proton, which is too light to be trapped. Consequently, a single REMPD event, defined as the simultaneous application of single pulses of the two colours, leads to a detectable loss in the number of trapped MgH+ ions proportional to the population of the particular rotational state being addressed13,24.

In the experiment, about 1,000 Mg+ ions are first trapped in a linear Paul trap and Doppler cooled using the 3s 2S1/2–3p 2P3/2 transition to a translational temperature of around 10 mK. At these low temperatures the Mg+ ions form a Coulomb crystal of which a two-dimensional projection image is presented in Fig. 2a (I). Next, MgH+ ions are formed through reactions between Mg+ ions excited to the 3p 2P3/2 state by the cooling laser beams and H2 molecules at room temperature, leaked into the vacuum chamber at a partial pressure of 1×10−9 mbar. When the desired number of molecular ions is produced (typically about 400 ions), a valve is closed and the partial pressure of H2 is reduced within 20 s to a level below 10−10 mbar using an ion getter pump (the total pressure is then 2–3×10−10 mbar). As shown in Fig. 2a (II), the formed MgH+ ions are sympathetically cooled by the remaining Mg+ ions into a two-species Coulomb crystal, with the non-fluorescing MgH+ ions positioned radially outside the fluorescing Mg+ ions. The radial separation is caused by the slight mass difference between the two ion species23,27. The ion densities of Mg+ and MgH+ are, however, almost identical (ρMg+=10.2(4)×107 cm−3 and ρMgH+=9.8(4)×107 cm−3). As practically no loss of ions happens during the reaction period, the total ion number is furthermore unchanged. The numbers of Mg+ and MgH+ ions in a two-component Coulomb crystal can therefore rather easily be determined from projection images, such as the one presented in Fig. 2a (II), by assuming that the spheroidal outer shape of the two-component crystal is identical to the one in Fig. 2a (I).

Figure 2: Experimental sequence.
figure 2

a, Projection images of Coulomb crystals recorded by a CCD (charge-coupled device) camera: after Mg+ ion loading (I), during equilibration after formation of MgH+ ions (II), and after one (III) and four (IV) REMPD events. The dashed ellipses indicate the contour of the initial crystal (I). b, The number of Mg+ (blue curve) and MgH+ (red curve) ions deduced from projection images of Coulomb crystals (for details see ref. 13). The intervals separated by the dashed vertical lines correspond to: trapping and cooling of Mg+ (1), formation of MgH+ (2), equilibration in the presence or absence of the cooling laser (3) and the period where subsequent REMPD events lead to dissociation of MgH+ (4). The labels I–IV indicate the times at which the images in a were recorded.

After the valve has been closed, the MgH+ ions are allowed to equilibrate internally for a period of two minutes in the presence of the room-temperature BBR field and optionally with a PbSe diode laser beam applied for cooling, by excitation of the |v=0,J=2〉X–|v=1,J=1〉X transition at 1,609 cm−1. Both in the presence and absence of the rotational cooling beam, ample time is available to reach the rotational steady-state distribution. During the equilibration period the numbers of Mg+ and MgH+ ions remain constant, as can be seen from region 3 in Fig. 2b.

After equilibration, two laser pulses at 266 nm and 281 nm, respectively, are applied simultaneously to carry out a REMPD event. The pulses are generated by frequency quadrupling light from a Nd:YAG laser (266 nm) and frequency doubling light from a dye laser pumped by the frequency doubled output from the same Nd:YAG laser (281 nm). The lengths of both pulses are 9 ns (FWHM).

When the pulse energies are set to 5 μJ and 1 mJ for the 281 nm and the 266 nm pulses, respectively, a single REMPD event is found to dissociate more than 90% of the MgH+ ions in the rotational state addressed by the tunable 281 nm laser without significant off-resonant dissociation from other states (total of less than 2%). In region 4 of Fig. 2b, an example of the stepwise decrease in the number of rotationally cooled MgH+ ions in the ground state |v=0,J=0〉X after successive REMPD events is shown. In Fig. 2a (III) and (IV) corresponding projection images are presented for reference. The combination of essentially perfect rotational level selectivity and nearly 100% dissociation probability in a single REMPD event provides a direct measure of the rotational state distribution at any chosen instant.

In Fig. 3a, the rotational state distributions for the 11 lowest-lying levels are presented both for the situation without cooling and for the case where cooling has been applied for two minutes. Here, the directly measured populations in the 11 rotational levels, both before and after cooling is applied, sum up to about 90% within an uncertainty of only 5%.

Figure 3: Rotational cooling results.
figure 3

a, Deduced rotational state distributions obtained from the REMPD measurements. The red bars indicate the results without application of the laser cooling beam and the blue bars indicate the distribution after a two-minute cooling period. For comparison, a thermal distribution at 293 K is presented by crosses. The population in all the rotational levels, except those with J=1 and J=2, was directly measured by exciting the |v=0,JX–|v=0,J+1〉A transition (R-branch) in the REMPD event. As the populations in levels with J=1 and J=2 were not spectroscopically resolvable using R-branch transitions (see for example, ref. 13), P-branch transitions were used instead. To account for the fact that only 1/3 and 3/5 of the population in the levels with J=1 and J=2, respectively, is expected to be excited, owing to the fixed polarization of the exciting laser light, these experimental results were multiplied by 3 and 5/3, respectively. The results are the average of typically 15 REMPD events and the darker colours at the top of the bars indicates the ±1 standard deviation error. b, The temporal evolution of the population in the ground state during rotational laser cooling. The population is clearly seen to saturate after one minute. The error bars are ±1 standard deviation. c, Theoretical prediction of rotational state distributions. The red bars correspond to a thermal distribution at 293 K and the blue bars indicate the cooled distribution based on the model described in detail in ref. 13. d, The temporal evolution of the population in the ground state during rotational laser cooling, based on the model presented in ref. 13.

Whereas the uncooled distribution fits well with a thermal distribution at room temperature (293 K), the cooled distribution shows a pronounced accumulation of population in the two lowest rotational states. More precisely, 36.7±1.2% of the population is found in the |v=0,J=0〉X state, 15.2±1.2% in the |v=0,J=1〉X level and the remaining population is distributed among the |v=0,J≥2〉X levels, with at most 6% in a single level. The fraction of molecules in the rovibrational ground state is equivalent to that of a thermal rotational distribution at 21.4±0.8 K.

In Fig. 3b, the temporal evolution of the population in the rotational ground state during cooling is shown. Here, the ground-state population is observed to saturate after 40–60 s. For comparison, theoretical predictions presented in ref. 13, based on a simplified rate equation model, are reproduced in Fig. 3c,d. Besides spontaneous emission and the laser-driven cooling transition, this model includes all dipole-allowed transitions driven by BBR between the levels |v=0,J=0…20〉X and |v=1,J=0…20〉X. Clearly, there is good agreement between the experimental and model results with respect to the timescale for the rotational cooling process as well as to the qualitative features of the cooled rotational state distribution. This fact supports that the essential physical processes are indeed included in the model. The quantitative difference between the experimentally obtained ground-state population and the model result may have several origins, including slight differences between the experimental conditions and the assumptions of the model, non-exact calculated values for the transition rates applied in the model and finally the rate model might be too simplistic. These potential reasons for the difference are being investigated for optimization of the present cooling scheme, as well as more complex rotational cooling schemes involving two or more cooling lasers (see also ref. 28).

The simplicity of the cooling scheme makes it generally applicable to a broad range of diatomic polar molecular ions with 1Σ electronic ground-state potentials. For this class of molecules, the only requirement for significant rotational cooling is that the |v=1,J=1〉X→|v=0,J=0〉X spontaneous transition rate has to greatly exceed the BBR-stimulated rate of the |v=0,J=0〉X→|v=0,J=1〉X transition. This will typically be the case for ionic hydrides, owing to their large vibrational constants.

Although the radiofrequency-field-driven coherent motional energy of the rotationally cooled molecular ions in the Coulomb crystals typically exceeds the thermal motion corresponding to 10 mK, (see refs 11, 27), for uni-molecular reaction studies involving coherent light fields, the effect of this motion can be avoided by propagating the light beams along the central radiofrequency-field-free axis of the trap. However, to carry out bi-molecular reactions at low kinetic energies one will have to confine the molecular ions to the radiofrequency-field-free axis. In the case of many molecular ions, this can best be achieved by embedding a single string of molecular ions in a two-species crystal (for example, MgH+ ions inside a Ca+ crystal29). Alternatively, one can turn to the ultimate situation of having a single molecular ion sympathetically cooled by a single atomic ion and localized within a volume below 1 μm3 centred at the radiofrequency-field-free axis30,31.

This last situation, combined with the demonstrated rotational cooling technique, gives unprecedented control in ionic uni- and bi-molecular reactions and will surely lead to improved molecular spectroscopy. Molecular ions initially prepared in their rovibrational ground state may even be exploited as physical quantum bits for an ion-trap-based quantum computer in the future.