Observation of alignment oscillations in laser-rotated molecules in He nanodroplets attributed to angulon-mediated angular momentum transfer to the superfluid.
Molecular impurities interacting with a many-particle environment: from helium droplets to ultracold gases
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
In several settings of physics and chemistry one has to deal with molecules interacting with some kind of an external environment, be it a gas, a solution, or a crystal surface. Understanding molecular processes in the presence of such a many-particle bath is inherently challenging, and usually requires large-scale numerical computations. Here, we present an alternative approach to the problem - that based on the notion of the angulon quasiparticle. We show that molecules rotating inside superfluid helium nanodroplets and Bose-Einstein Condensates form angulons, and therefore can be described by straightforward solutions of a simple microscopic Hamiltonian. Casting the problem in the language of angulons allows not only to tremendously simplify it, but also to gain insights into the origins of the observed phenomena and to make predictions for future experimental studies.
fields
physics.atm-clus 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Far-from-equilibrium dynamics of angular momentum in a quantum many-particle system
Observation of alignment oscillations in laser-rotated molecules in He nanodroplets attributed to angulon-mediated angular momentum transfer to the superfluid.