Dipolar collisions of polar molecules in the quantum regime
K.-K. Ni, S. Ospelkaus, D. Wang, G. Quemener, B. Neyenhuis, M. H. G., de Miranda, J. L. Bohn, J. Ye, D. S. Jin

TL;DR
This paper reports the first observation of dipolar collisions in an ultracold polar molecule gas near quantum degeneracy, highlighting the effects of electric dipole moments on reaction rates and anisotropic interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the measurement of dipolar collision rates and their dependence on electric fields, providing insights into controlling ultracold chemical reactions with dipolar interactions.
Findings
Loss rate increases steeply with electric dipole moment
Dipolar interactions exhibit spatial anisotropy in thermodynamics
Long-range dipolar interactions influence chemical reaction rates
Abstract
Ultracold polar molecules offer the possibility of exploring quantum gases with interparticle interactions that are strong, long-range, and spatially anisotropic. This is in stark contrast to the dilute gases of ultracold atoms, which have isotropic and extremely short-range, or "contact", interactions. The large electric dipole moment of polar molecules can be tuned with an external electric field; this provides unique opportunities such as control of ultracold chemical reactions, quantum information processing, and the realization of novel quantum many-body systems. In spite of intense experimental efforts aimed at observing the influence of dipoles on ultracold molecules, only recently have sufficiently high densities been achieved. Here, we report the observation of dipolar collisions in an ultracold molecular gas prepared close to quantum degeneracy. For modest values of an applied…
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