Novel binding mechanism for ultra-long range molecules
V. Bendkowsky, B. Butscher, J. Nipper, J. P. Shaffer, R. Loew, and T., Pfau

TL;DR
This paper reports spectroscopic evidence for a novel ultra-long range molecular binding mechanism involving low-energy electron scattering, leading to giant molecules with unique properties, and models their binding energies and scattering parameters.
Contribution
It introduces and characterizes a new type of ultralong-range molecule formed via low-energy electron scattering, with experimental data and a theoretical model explaining their binding energies.
Findings
Spectroscopic evidence for vibrational states of Rb molecules.
Extraction of s-wave scattering length for electron-Rb scattering.
Determination of lifetimes and polarisabilities of these molecules.
Abstract
Molecular bonds can be divided into four primary types: ionic, covalent, van der Waals and hydrogen bonds. At ultralow temperatures a novel binding type emerges paving the way for novel molecules and ultracold chemistry [1,2]. The underlying mechanism for this new type of chemical bond is low-energy electron scattering of Rydberg electrons from polarisable ground state atoms [3]. This quantum scattering process can generate an attractive potential that is able to bind the ground state atom to the Rydberg atom at a well localized position within the Rydberg electron wave function. The resulting giant molecules can have an internuclear separation of several thousand Bohr radii, which places them among the largest known molecules to date. Their binding energies are much smaller than the Kepler frequencies of the Rydberg electrons i.e. the atomic Rydberg electron state is essentially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
