Strongly correlated ultracold plasma

Ultracold molecular plasmas represent a new frontier of plasma physics. They offer an easy and accessible laboratory for the study of strongly coupled Coulomb systems. Strong Coulomb coupling can give rise to exotic materials such as Wigner crystals and liquid like plasmas. In this thesis, I present...

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Main Author: Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59478
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-594782018-01-05T17:29:21Z Strongly correlated ultracold plasma Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein Ultracold molecular plasmas represent a new frontier of plasma physics. They offer an easy and accessible laboratory for the study of strongly coupled Coulomb systems. Strong Coulomb coupling can give rise to exotic materials such as Wigner crystals and liquid like plasmas. In this thesis, I present a set of experiments and theoretical models that explore the properties of ultracold plasma in great detail. A supersonic beam of nitric oxide in helium creates a cold ensemble of ground state molecules. Upon two-color excitation, a Rydberg gas of nitric oxide evolves on a time scale of nanoseconds to form an ultracold plasma. The excited volume is imaged using a multichannel plate detector mounted on a movable grid. By moving the detector back and forth, we can observe the expansion dynamics of the plasma and its decay. Selective field ionization captures the relaxation of the Rydberg states to a plasma. We use a very reliable coupled-rate-equation model to understand the decay dynamics and evolution of Rydberg gas to a plasma by accounting for all the major processes that happen during the avalanche process. We find that a plasma evolved from an ultracold Rydberg gas expands very slowly, exhibits long relaxation time, and shows evidence suggesting the development of spatial order. Science, Faculty of Chemistry, Department of Graduate 2016-10-17T16:51:31Z 2016-10-18T14:03:47 2016 2016-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59478 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Ultracold molecular plasmas represent a new frontier of plasma physics. They offer an easy and accessible laboratory for the study of strongly coupled Coulomb systems. Strong Coulomb coupling can give rise to exotic materials such as Wigner crystals and liquid like plasmas. In this thesis, I present a set of experiments and theoretical models that explore the properties of ultracold plasma in great detail. A supersonic beam of nitric oxide in helium creates a cold ensemble of ground state molecules. Upon two-color excitation, a Rydberg gas of nitric oxide evolves on a time scale of nanoseconds to form an ultracold plasma. The excited volume is imaged using a multichannel plate detector mounted on a movable grid. By moving the detector back and forth, we can observe the expansion dynamics of the plasma and its decay. Selective field ionization captures the relaxation of the Rydberg states to a plasma. We use a very reliable coupled-rate-equation model to understand the decay dynamics and evolution of Rydberg gas to a plasma by accounting for all the major processes that happen during the avalanche process. We find that a plasma evolved from an ultracold Rydberg gas expands very slowly, exhibits long relaxation time, and shows evidence suggesting the development of spatial order. === Science, Faculty of === Chemistry, Department of === Graduate
author Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein
spellingShingle Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein
Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
author_facet Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein
author_sort Sadeghi Esfahani, Hossein
title Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
title_short Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
title_full Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
title_fullStr Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
title_full_unstemmed Strongly correlated ultracold plasma
title_sort strongly correlated ultracold plasma
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59478
work_keys_str_mv AT sadeghiesfahanihossein stronglycorrelatedultracoldplasma
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