Ultracold plasmas from strongly anti-correlated Rydberg gases in the Kinetic Field Theory formalism
Elena Kozlikin, Robert Lilow, Martin Pauly, Alexander Schuckert, Andre, Salzinger, Matthias Bartelmann, Matthias Weidem\"uller

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that Kinetic Field Theory (KFT) can effectively model the evolution of ultracold, correlated Rydberg gases and ion plasmas, providing insights into their dynamics and disorder-induced heating effects.
Contribution
The study extends KFT application to correlated ultracold plasma systems, offering a computationally efficient analytical approach validated against simulations.
Findings
KFT accurately predicts correlation function evolution.
Disorder-induced heating can be reversed under certain conditions.
KFT provides insights into minimizing heating to achieve strong coupling.
Abstract
The dynamics of correlated systems is relevant in many fields ranging from cosmology to plasma physics. However, they are challenging to predict and understand even for classical systems due to the typically large numbers of particles involved. Here, we study the evolution of an ultracold, correlated many-body system with repulsive interactions and initial correlations set by the Rydberg blockade using the analytical framework of Kinetic Field Theory (KFT). The KFT formalism is based on the path-integral formulation for classical mechanics and was first developed and successfully used in cosmology to describe structure formation in Dark Matter. The theoretical framework offers a high flexibility regarding the initial configuration and interactions between particles and, in addition, is computationally cheap. More importantly, the analytic approach allows us to gain better insight into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Climate variability and models · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
