Slow molecules are efficiently extracted from a thermal reservoir by exploiting the interaction between polar molecules and the field provided by an electrostatic quadrupole guide. Electrostatic velocity filtering is widely applicable, which is demonstrated by producing guided beams of ammonia ND
3, formaldehyde H
2CO, and the water isotopologs H
2O, D
2O, and HDO. Ultraviolet depletion spectroscopy in a cold guided beam of formaldehyde makes the population in individual rotational states visible and testifies their key role in velocity filtering. Enhanced Rayleigh scattering into an optical cavity is investigated as an alternative non-destructive detection method for cold molecules. For various room-temperature gases, the observed enhancement is well described by interference of electromagnetic fields scattered into the resonator by a classical driven dipole oscillator.
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Slow molecules are efficiently extracted from a thermal reservoir by exploiting the interaction between polar molecules and the field provided by an electrostatic quadrupole guide. Electrostatic velocity filtering is widely applicable, which is demonstrated by producing guided beams of ammonia ND
3, formaldehyde H
2CO, and the water isotopologs H
2O, D
2O, and HDO. Ultraviolet depletion spectroscopy in a cold guided beam of formaldehyde makes the population in individual rotational states visible an...
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