Many-body physics with ultracold plasmas: Quenched randomness and localization
John Sous, Edward Grant

TL;DR
This paper investigates the arrested state of ultracold molecular plasmas, proposing that many-body localization explains their non-relaxing behavior due to complex, disordered interactions among a vast number of states.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal phenomenological model of randomly interacting dipoles to explain the observed arrested relaxation as many-body localization in ultracold plasmas.
Findings
Experimental evidence of long-lived arrested states in ultracold plasmas.
Proposal that many-body localization accounts for the lack of relaxation.
Complex web of interactions exceeds conventional MBL models.
Abstract
The exploration of large-scale many-body phenomena in quantum materials has produced many important experimental discoveries, including novel states of entanglement, topology and quantum order as found for example in quantum spin ices, topological insulators and semimetals, complex magnets, and high- superconductors. Yet, the sheer scale of solid-state systems and the difficulty of exercising exacting control of their quantum mechanical degrees of freedom limit the pace of rational progress in advancing the properties of these and other materials. With extraordinary effort to counteract natural processes of dissipation, precisely engineered ultracold quantum simulators could point the way to exotic new materials. Here, we look instead to the quantum mechanical character of the arrested state formed by a quenched ultracold molecular plasma. This novel class of system arises…
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