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      Continuous probe of cold complex molecules with infrared frequency comb spectroscopy

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          Abstract

          Cavity-enhanced frequency comb spectroscopy for molecule detection in the mid-infrared powerfully combines high resolution, high sensitivity, and broad spectral coverage. However, this technique, and essentially all spectroscopic methods, is limited in application to relatively small, simple molecules. Here we integrate comb spectroscopy with continuous, cold samples of molecules produced via buffer gas cooling, thus enabling the study of significantly more complex molecules. We report simultaneous gains in resolution, sensitivity, and bandwidth and demonstrate this combined capability with the first rotationally resolved direct absorption spectra in the CH stretch region of several complex molecules. These include nitromethane (CH\(_3\)NO\(_2\)), a model system that presents challenging questions to the understanding of large amplitude vibrational motion, as well as several large organic molecules with fundamental spectroscopic and astrochemical relevance, including naphthalene (C\(_{10}\)H\(_8\)), adamantane (C\(_{10}\)H\(_{16}\)), and hexamethylenetetramine (C\(_{6}\)N\(_4\)H\(_{12}\)). This general spectroscopic tool has the potential to significantly impact the field of molecular spectroscopy, simultaneously improving efficiency, spectral resolution, and specificity by orders of magnitude. This realization could open up new molecular species and new kinetics for precise investigations, including the study of complex molecules, weakly bound clusters, and cold chemistry.

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          Most cited references13

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          Vibrational Energy Flow in Highly Excited Molecules:  Role of Intramolecular Vibrational Redistribution

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            Broadband cavity ringdown spectroscopy for sensitive and rapid molecular detection.

            We demonstrate highly efficient cavity ringdown spectroscopy in which a broad-bandwidth optical frequency comb is coherently coupled to a high-finesse optical cavity that acts as the sample chamber. 125,000 optical comb components, each coupled into a specific longitudinal cavity mode, undergo ringdown decays when the cavity input is shut off. Sensitive intracavity absorption information is simultaneously available across 100 nanometers in the visible and near-infrared spectral regions. Real-time, quantitative measurements were made of the trace presence, the transition strengths and linewidths, and the population redistributions due to collisions and the temperature changes for molecules such as C2H2, O2, H2O, and NH3.
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              The Infrared Spectra of Naphthalene Crystals, Vapor, and Solutions

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                1601.07845

                Physical chemistry
                Physical chemistry

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