Research Highlights

Atomic & Molecular Physics | Laser Physics | Quantum Information Science & Technology
New JILA Tools ‘Turn On’ Quantum Gases of Ultracold Molecules
False-color image of a gas of potassium-rubidium polar molecules
Published: December 12, 2020

For the first time, researchers can turn on an electric field to manipulate molecular interactions, get them to cool down further, and start to explore collective physics where all molecules are coupled to each other.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Laser Physics | Quantum Information Science & Technology
JILA’s Electric ‘Knob’ Tunes Chemical Reaction Rates in Quantum Gas
Optical lattice
Published: December 10, 2020

Building on their newfound ability to induce molecules in ultracold gases to interact with each other over long distances, JILA researchers have used an electric “knob” to influence molecular collisions and dramatically raise or lower chemical reaction rates.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Laser Physics | Quantum Information Science & Technology
Advanced Atomic Clock Makes a Better Dark Matter Detector
Cartoon clock looks for dark matter.
Published: November 30, 2020

JILA researchers have used a state-of-the-art atomic clock to narrow the search for elusive dark matter, an example of how continual improvements in clocks have value beyond timekeeping.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
Total Ellipse of the SU(N)
SU(N) fermions display unique properties.
Published: September 11, 2020

A strangely shaped cloud of fermions revealed a record-fast way of cooling atoms for quantum devices.

PI: Jun Ye | PI: Ana Maria Rey
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
The Sisyphean Task of Cooling Molecules
Gray molasses cooling in YO molecules
Published: June 03, 2020

Bringing molecules down to ultracold temperatures takes a mythic approach, but the Ye Group finds that their new scheme can hold up under tough conditions.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Laser Physics | Precision Measurement
Tweezing a New Kind of Atomic Clock
optical tweezers holding atoms, connected by a clock
Published: February 16, 2020

Using optical tweezers, the Kaufman and Ye groups at JILA have achieved record coherence times, an important advance for optical clocks and quantum computing.

PI: Adam Kaufman | PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
How universal is universality?
Van der Waals universality between atoms
Published: December 09, 2019

New research from the Cornell Group suggests that the van der Waals universality may have limitations.

PI: Eric Cornell | PI: Jun Ye
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Precision Measurement
Keep it steady
Silicon cavity constructed at JILA to reduce noise in optical atomic clock
Published: July 29, 2019

It's hard to read a clock with hands that wobble. The Ye Group has found a way to steady their optical atomic clock using a new cavity.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
Buckyballs Play by Quantum Rules
Artist's Illustration of Buckyballs and Frequency Comb
Published: February 22, 2019

When the Ye group measured the total quantum state of buckyballs, we learned that this large molecule can play by full quantum rules. Specifically, this measurement resolved the rotational states of the buckyball, making it the largest and most complex molecule to be understood at this level.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
The First Quantum Degenerate Polar Molecules
Illustration showing rubidium and potassium atoms.
Published: January 18, 2019

Understanding chemistry requires understanding both molecules and quantum physics. The former defines the start and end of chemical reactions, the latter dictates the dynamics in between. JILA researchers now have a better understanding of both.

PI: Jun Ye
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Laser Physics
Turn it Up to 11 – The XUV Comb
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Published: September 04, 2018

With the advent of the laser, the fuzzy bands glowing from atoms transformed into narrow lines of distinct color. These spectral lines became guiding beacons visible from the quantum frontier. More than a half century later, we stand at the next frontier. The elegant physics that will decode today’s mysteries (such as dark matter, dark energy, and the stability of our fundamental constants, to name a few) is still shrouded in shadows. But a new tool promises illumination. 

PI: Jun Ye
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Precision Measurement
Same Clock. New Perspective.
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Published: March 26, 2018

We all know what a tenth of a second feels like. It’s a jiffy, a snap of the fingers, or a camera shutter click. But what does 14 billion years–the age of the universe–feel like? JILA’s atomic clock has the precision to measure the age of the universe to within a tenth of a second. That sort of precision is difficult to intuit. Yet, JILA’s atomic clock, which is the most precise clock in the world, continues to improve its precision. The latest jump in precision, of nearly 50 percent, came about from a new perspective.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
The Energetic Adolescence of Carbon Dioxide
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Published: January 12, 2018

The reaction, at first glance, seems simple. Combustion engines, such as those in your car, form carbon monoxide (CO). Sunlight converts atmospheric water into a highly reactive hydroxyl radical (OH). And when CO and OH meet, one byproduct is carbon dioxide (CO2) ­– a main contributor to air pollution and climate change.

PI: Jun Ye
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Precision Measurement
And, The Answer Is . . . Still Round
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Published: October 09, 2017

Why are we here? This is an age-old philosophical question. However, physicists like Will Cairncross, Dan Gresh and their advisors Eric Cornell and Jun Ye actually want to figure out out why people like us exist at all. If there had been the same amount of matter and antimatter created in the Big Bang, the future of stars, galaxies, our Solar System, and life would have disappeared in a flash of light as matter and antimatter recombined.

PI: Eric Cornell | PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Precision Measurement
The Clock that Changed the World
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Published: October 05, 2017

Imagine A Future . . . The International Moon Station team is busy on the Moon’s surface using sensitive detectors of gravity and magnetic and electric fields looking for underground water-rich materials, iron-containing ores, and other raw materials required for building a year-round Moon station. The station’s mission: launching colonists and supplies to Mars for colonization. Meanwhile, back on Earth, Americans are under simultaneous assault by three Category 5 hurricanes, one in the Gulf of Mexico and two others threatening the Caribbean islands. Hundreds of people are stranded in the rising waters, but thanks precision cell-phone location services and robust cell-tower connections in high wind, their rescuers are able to accurately pinpoint their locations and send help immediately.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
Quantum Adventures with Cold Molecules
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Published: September 07, 2017

Researchers at JILA and around the world are starting a grand adventure of precisely controlling the internal and external quantum states of ultracold molecules after years of intense experimental and theoretical study. Such control of small molecules, which are the most complex quantum systems that can currently be completely understood from the principles of quantum mechanics, will allow researchers to probe the quantum interactions of individual molecules with other molecules, investigate what happens to molecules during collisions, and study how molecules behave in chemical reactions. 

PI: Ana Maria Rey | PI: John Bohn | PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Precision Measurement
Quantum Leaps
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Published: December 21, 2016

In the Ye group’s new quantum simulation experiment, cold strontium atoms, which are analogs of electrons, are allowed to tunnel between the pancakes that confine the atoms with laser light. Because the atoms moving in an array of pancakes are analogs of electrons moving in solids, such studies are expected to shed light on the complex physics of metals and other solids. Credit:  The Ye group and Steve Burrows, JILA

PI: Ana Maria Rey | PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
Molecules at the Quantum Frontier
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Published: December 19, 2016

Deborah Jin, Jun Ye, and their students wrote a review during the summer of 2016 for Nature Physics highlighting the accomplishments and future directions of the relatively new field of ultracold-molecule research. The field was pioneered by the group’s creation of the world’s first gas of ultracold potassium-rubidium (KRb) molecules in 2008.

PI: Deborah Jin | PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics | Chemical Physics | Laser Physics
The Radical Comb-Over
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Published: October 27, 2016

Using frequency comb spectroscopy, the Ye group has directly observed transient intermediate steps in a chemical reaction that plays a key role in combustion, atmospheric chemistry, and chemistry in the interstellar medium. The group was able to make this first-ever measurement because frequency combs generate a wide range of laser wavelengths in ultrafast pulses. These pulses made it possible for the researchers to “see” every step in the chemical reaction of OH + CO → HOCO → CO2 + H.

PI: Jun Ye
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Atomic & Molecular Physics
Stalking the Wild Molecules
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Published: May 04, 2016

The Ye group just solved a major problem for using molecular fingerprinting techniques to identify large, complex molecules: The researchers used an infrared (IR) frequency comb laser to identify four different large or complicated molecules. The IR laser-light absorption technique worked well for the first time with these larger molecules because the group combined it with buffer gas cooling, which precooled their samples to just a few degrees above absolute zero. 

PI: Jun Ye
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