Long-range interactions between ultracold atoms and molecules
Maxence Lepers, Olivier Dulieu

TL;DR
This paper reviews the fundamental concepts and mathematical frameworks for understanding long-range electrostatic and magnetostatic interactions between ultracold atoms and molecules, emphasizing their quantum control and relevance in ultracold gas dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive derivation of multipolar expansion and energy corrections, including van der Waals forces, tailored for ultracold atomic and molecular systems.
Findings
Derivation of multipolar electrostatic interaction energies
Analysis of van der Waals energy in ultracold regimes
Impact of external electric fields on atom-molecule interactions
Abstract
The term "long-range interactions" refers to electrostatic and magnetostatic potential energies between atoms and molecules with mutual distances ranging from a few tens to a few hundreds Bohr radii. The involved energies are much smaller than the usual chemical bond energies. However, they are comparable with the typical kinetic energies of particles in an ultracold gas (), so that the long-range interactions play a central role in its dynamics. The progress of research devoted to ultracold gases shed a new light on the well-established topic of long-range interactions, because: (i) the interacting atoms and molecules can be prepared in a well-defined quantum (electronic, vibrational, rotational, fine or hyper-fine), ground or excited level; and (ii) long-range interactions can be tailored at will using external electromagnetic fields. In this chapter, we present the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
