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      Spectroscopic Probe of the van der Waals Interaction between Polar Molecules and a Curved Surface

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          Abstract

          We study the shift of rotational levels of a diatomic polar molecule due to its van der Waals (vdW) interaction with a gently curved dielectric surface at temperature \(T\), and submicron separations. The molecule is assumed to be in its electronic and vibrational ground state, and the rotational degrees are described by a rigid rotor model. We show that under these conditions retardation effects and surface dispersion can be neglected. The level shifts are found to be independent of \(T\), and given by the quantum state averaged classical electrostatic interaction of the dipole with its image on the surface. We use a derivative expansion for the static Green's function to express the shifts in terms of surface curvature. We argue that the curvature induced line splitting is experimentally observable, and not obscured by natural line widths and thermal broadening.

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          Casimir-Polder forces in the presence of thermally excited surface modes

          The temperature dependence of the Casimir-Polder interaction addresses fundamental issues for understanding vacuum and thermal fluctuations. It is highly sensitive to surface waves which, in the near field, govern the thermal emission of a hot surface. Here we use optical reflection spectroscopy to monitor the atom-surface interaction between a Cs*(7D3/2) atom and a hot sapphire surface at a distance ~ 100 nm. In our experiments, that explore a large range of temperatures (500-1000K) the hot surface is at thermal equilibrium with the vacuum. The observed increase of the interaction with temperature, by up to 50 %, relies on the coupling between atomic virtual transitions in the infrared range and thermally excited surface-polariton modes. We extrapolate our findings to a broad distance range, from the isolated free atom to the short distances relevant to physical chemistry. Our work also opens the prospect of controlling atom surface interactions by engineering thermal fields.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            2016-06-15
            2016-07-30
            Article
            10.1103/PhysRevA.94.022509
            1606.04641
            c0c17a29-b06a-4a58-b26b-600008b289a4

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

            History
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            Phys. Rev. A 94, 022509 (2016)
            8 pages, 2 figures, version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. A
            quant-ph

            Quantum physics & Field theory
            Quantum physics & Field theory

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