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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 21(5): 2276-2282, 2019 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30443651

ABSTRACT

Long-range interparticle interactions are revealed in extremely dilute thermal atomic ensembles using highly sensitive nonlinear femtosecond spectroscopy. Delocalized excitons are detected in the atomic systems at particle densities where the mean interatomic distance (>10 µm) is much greater than the laser wavelength and multi-particle coherences should destructively interfere over the ensemble average. With a combined experimental and theoretical analysis, we identify an effective interaction mechanism, presumably of dipolar nature, as the origin of the excitonic signals. Our study implies that even in highly-dilute thermal atom ensembles, significant transition dipole-dipole interaction networks may form that require advanced modeling beyond the nearest neighbor approximation to quantitatively capture the details of their many-body properties.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 13(42): 18872-9, 2011 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21912784

ABSTRACT

Using state-selected double-resonant excitation, we create a Rydberg gas of NO molecules excited to the principal quantum number n = 50 of the f-series converging to the ion rotational level, N(+) = 2. This gas evolves to form an ultracold plasma, which expands under the thermal pressure of its electrons, and dissipates by electron-ion recombination. Under conditions chosen for this experiment, the observed rates of expansion vary with selected plasma density. Electron temperatures derived from these expansion rates vary from T(e) = 12 K for the highest density up to 16 K at four-fold lower density. Over this range, the apparent electron coupling parameter, defined as Γ(e) = e(2)/4πε(0)ak(B)T(e), falls from nearly three to about one. The decay of charged-particle density fits with a kinetic model that includes parallel paths of direct two-body and stepwise three-body dissociative recombination. The overall recombinative decay follows a second-order rate law, with an observed rate constant that fits with established scattering-theory estimates for elementary two-body dissociative recombination. A small residual increase in this rate constant with decreasing charged-particle density suggests a growing importance of the three-body recombination channel under conditions of decreasing electron correlation.

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