Radio frequency field-induced electron mobility in an ultracold plasma state of arrested relaxation


METADATA ONLY
Loading...

Date

2020-12

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric
METADATA ONLY

Data

Rights / License

Abstract

Penning ionization releases electrons in a state-selected Rydberg gas of nitric oxide entrained in a supersonic molecular beam. Subsequent processes of electron impact avalanche, bifurcation, and quench form a strongly coupled, spatially correlated, ultracold plasma of NO+ ions and electrons that exhibits characteristics of self-organized criticality. This plasma contains a residue of nitric oxide Rydberg molecules. A conventional fluid dynamics of ion-electron-Rydberg quasi-equilibrium predicts rapid decay to neutral atoms. Instead, the NO plasma endures for a millisecond or more, suggesting that quenched disorder creates a state of suppressed electron mobility. Supporting this proposition, a 60-MHz radio frequency field with a peak-to-peak amplitude less than 1 V cm−1 acts dramatically to mobilize electrons, causing the plasma to dissipate by dissociative recombination and Rydberg predissociation. An evident density dependence shows that this effect relies on collisions, giving weight to the idea of arrested relaxation as a cooperative property of the ensemble. © 2020 American Physical Society

Permanent link

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

102 (6)

Pages / Article No.

63122

Publisher

American Physical Society

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets