48 research outputs found
Relaxation to non-equilibrium in expanding ultracold neutral plasmas
We investigate the strongly correlated ion dynamics and the degree of
coupling achievable in the evolution of freely expanding ultracold neutral
plasmas. We demonstrate that the ionic Coulomb coupling parameter increases considerably in later stages of the expansion, reaching the
strongly coupled regime despite the well-known initial drop of
to order unity due to disorder-induced heating. Furthermore, we formulate a
suitable measure of correlation and show th at calculated from
the ionic temperature and density reflects the degree of order in the system if
it is sufficiently close to a quasisteady state. At later times, however, the
expansion of the plasma cloud becomes faster than the relaxation of
correlations, and the system does not reach thermodynamic equilibrium anymore
Influence of electron-ion collisions on Coulomb crystallization of ultracold neutral plasmas
While ion heating by elastic electron-ion collisions may be neglected for a
description of the evolution of freely expanding ultracold neutral plasmas, the
situation is different in scenarios where the ions are laser-cooled during the
system evolution. We show that electron-ion collisions in laser-cooled plasmas
influence the ionic temperature, decreasing the degree of correlation
obtainable in such systems. However, taking into account the collisions
increases the ion temperature much less than what would be estimated based on
static plasma clouds neglecting the plasma expansion. The latter leads to both
adiabatic cooling of the ions as well as, more importantly, a rapid decrease of
the collisional heating rate
Ultracold Neutral Plasmas
Ultracold neutral plasmas, formed by photoionizing laser-cooled atoms near
the ionization threshold, have electron temperatures in the 1-1000 kelvin range
and ion temperatures from tens of millikelvin to a few kelvin. They represent a
new frontier in the study of neutral plasmas, which traditionally deals with
much hotter systems, but they also blur the boundaries of plasma, atomic,
condensed matter, and low temperature physics. Modelling these plasmas
challenges computational techniques and theories of non-equilibrium systems, so
the field has attracted great interest from the theoretical and computational
physics communities. By varying laser intensities and wavelengths it is
possible to accurately set the initial plasma density and energy, and
charged-particle-detection and optical diagnostics allow precise measurements
for comparison with theoretical predictions. Recent experiments using optical
probes demonstrated that ions in the plasma equilibrate in a strongly coupled
fluid phase. Strongly coupled plasmas, in which the electrical interaction
energy between charged particles exceeds the average kinetic energy, reverse
the traditional energy hierarchy underlying basic plasma concepts such as Debye
screening and hydrodynamics. Equilibration in this regime is of particular
interest because it involves the establishment of spatial correlations between
particles, and it connects to the physics of the interiors of gas-giant planets
and inertial confinement fusion devices.Comment: 89 pages, 54 image
Kinetic modelling and molecular dynamics simulation of ultracold neutral plasmas including ionic correlations
A kinetic approach for the evolution of ultracold neutral plasmas including
interionic correlations and the treatment of ionization/excitation and
recombination/deexcitation by rate equations is described in detail. To assess
the reliability of the approximations inherent in the kinetic model, we have
developed a hybrid molecular dynamics method. Comparison of the results reveals
that the kinetic model describes the atomic and ionic observables of the
ultracold plasma surprisingly well, confirming our earlier findings concerning
the role of ion-ion correlations [Phys. Rev. A {\bf 68}, 010703]. In addition,
the molecular dynamics approach allows one to study the relaxation of the ionic
plasma component towards thermodynamical equilibrium
Universal shape function for the double ionization cross section of negative ions by electron impact
It is shown that recently measured cross sections for double ionization of negative ions (, and ) possess a universal shape when plotted in suitable dimensionless units. The shape can be represented with a simple analytical function, following the same principles as it has been done in establishing a universal shape function for single ionization [Rost and Pattard 1997 Phys. Rev. A {\bf 55} R5]. Thereby, it is demonstrated that direct double ionization dominates the cross section for the targets considered
Many-body theory of excitation dynamics in an ultracold Rydberg gas
We develop a theoretical approach for the dynamics of Rydberg excitations in
ultracold gases, with a realistically large number of atoms. We rely on the
reduction of the single-atom Bloch equations to rate equations, which is
possible under various experimentally relevant conditions. Here, we explicitly
refer to a two-step excitation-scheme. We discuss the conditions under which
our approach is valid by comparing the results with the solution of the exact
quantum master equation for two interacting atoms. Concerning the emergence of
an excitation blockade in a Rydberg gas, our results are in qualitative
agreement with experiment. Possible sources of quantitative discrepancy are
carefully examined. Based on the two-step excitation scheme, we predict the
occurrence of an antiblockade effect and propose possible ways to detect this
excitation enhancement experimentally in an optical lattice as well as in the
gas phase.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
On the role of shake-off in single-photon double ionization
The role of shake-off for double ionization of atoms by a single photon with
finite energy has become the subject of debate. In this letter, we attempt to
clarify the meaning of shake-off at low photon energies by comparing different
formulations appearing in the literature and by suggesting a working
definition. Moreover, we elaborate on the foundation and justification of a
mixed quantum-classical ansatz for the calculation of single-photon double
ionization
Coulomb crystallization in expanding laser-cooled neutral plasmas
We present long-time simulations of expanding ultracold neutral plasmas,
including a full treatment of the strongly coupled ion dynamics. Thereby, the
relaxation dynamics of the expanding laser-cooled plasma is studied, taking
into account elastic as well as inelastic collisions. It is demonstrated that,
depending on the initial conditions, the ionic component of the plasma may
exhibit short-range order or even a superimposed long-range order resulting in
concentric ion shells. In contrast to ionic plasmas confined in traps, the
shell structures are built up from the center of the plasma cloud rather than
from the periphery