We analyze the effects of Zeeman degeneracies on the long-range interactions
between like Rydberg atoms, with particular emphasis on applications to quantum
information processing using van der Waals blockade. We present a general
analysis of how degeneracies affect the primary error sources in blockade
experiments, emphasizing that blockade errors are sensitive primarily to the
weakest possible atom-atom interactions between the degenerate states, not the
mean interaction strength. We present explicit calculations of the van der
Waals potentials in the limit where the fine-structure interaction is large
compared to the atom-atom interactions. The results are presented for all
potential angular momentum channels invoving s, p, and d states. For most
channels there are one or more combinations of Zeeman levels that have
extremely small dipole-dipole interactions and are therefore poor candidates
for effective blockade experiments. Channels with promising properties are
identified and discussed. We also present numerical calculations of Rb and Cs
dipole matrix elements and relevant energy levels using quantum defect theory,
allowing for convenient quantitative estimates of the van der Waals
interactions to be made for principal quantum numbers up to 100. Finally, we
combine the blockade and van der Waals results to quantitatively analyze the
angular distribution of the blockade shift and its consequence for angular
momentum channels and geometries of particular interest for blockade
experiments with Rb.Comment: 16 figure