On the formation and decay of a molecular ultracold plasma
N. Saquet, J. P. Morrison, M. Schulz-Weiling, H. Sadeghi, J. Yiu, C., J. Rennick, E. R. Grant

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation, properties, and decay mechanisms of a molecular ultracold plasma created from nitric oxide Rydberg states, highlighting the role of molecular fragmentation in plasma evolution.
Contribution
It adapts atomic ultracold plasma models to include molecular channels, revealing how molecular fragmentation influences plasma dynamics and energy redistribution.
Findings
Plasma expands at electron temperatures as low as 5 K.
Molecular fragmentation channels affect energy and particle redistribution.
Neutral molecule formation involves high-energy dissociation.
Abstract
Double-resonant photoexcitation of nitric oxide in a molecular beam creates a dense ensemble of Rydberg states, which evolves to form a plasma of free electrons trapped in the potential well of an NO spacecharge. The plasma travels at the velocity of the molecular beam, and, on passing through a grounded grid, yields an electron time-of-flight signal that gauges the plasma size and quantity of trapped electrons. This plasma expands at a rate that fits with an electron temperature as low as 5 K, colder that typically observed for atomic ultracold plasmas. The recombination of molecular NO cations with electrons forms neutral molecules excited by more than twice the energy of the NO chemical bond, and the question arises whether neutral fragmentation plays a role in shaping the redistribution of energy and particle density that directs the short-time evolution from…
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