Dynamical control in a prethermalized molecular ultracold plasma: Local dissipation drives global relaxation
Ruoxi Wang, Amin Allahverdian, Smilla Colombini, Nathan Durand-Brousseau, Kevin Marroqu{\i}n, James Keller, John Sous, Abhinav Prem, Edward Grant

TL;DR
This study observes a long-lasting prethermal regime in a molecular ultracold plasma, where local dissipation and external stimuli like RF fields or quantum transitions can induce global relaxation.
Contribution
It reveals how local dissipation and external perturbations can control the transition from prethermalization to thermal equilibrium in a complex quantum plasma.
Findings
Prethermal regime persists for over a millisecond due to a gap in Rydberg states.
Weak RF fields significantly accelerate relaxation by promoting electron collisions.
Small quantum-state excitations can trigger system-wide equilibration through dissipative effects.
Abstract
Prethermalization occurs as an important phase in the dynamics of many-body systems when strong coupling drives a quasi-equilibrium in a subspace separated from the thermodynamic equilibrium by the restriction of a gap in energy or other conserved quantity. Here, we report the signature of an enduring prethermal regime of arrested relaxation in the molecular ultracold plasma that forms following the avalanche of a state-selected Rydberg gas of nitric oxide. Electron collisions mix orbital angular momentum, scattering Rydberg molecules to states of very high-. Spontaneous predissociation purifies this non-penetrating character, creating an extraordinary gap between the plasma states of , with measured and penetrating states of and 2. Evolution to a statistically equilibrated state of N and O atoms cannot occur without Rydberg electron…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
