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Chemical Reaction of Ultracold Atoms and Ions in a Hybrid Trap

Published 28 Apr 2011 in physics.atom-ph, astro-ph.GA, and physics.chem-ph | (1104.5478v1)

Abstract: Interactions between cold ions and atoms have been proposed for use in implementing quantum gates\cite{Idziaszek2007}, probing quantum gases\cite{Sherkunov2009}, observing novel charge-transport dynamics\cite{Cote2000}, and sympathetically cooling atomic and molecular systems which cannot be laser cooled\cite{Smith2005,Hudson2009}. Furthermore, the chemistry between cold ions and atoms is foundational to issues in modern astrophysics, including the formation of stars, planets, and interstellar clouds\cite{Smith1992}, the diffuse interstellar bands\cite{Reddy2010}, and the post-recombination epoch of the early universe\cite{Stancil1996b}. However, as pointed out in refs 9 and 10, both experimental data and a theoretical description of the ion-atom interaction at low temperatures, reached in these modern atomic physics experiments and the interstellar environment, are still largely missing. Here we observe a chemical reaction between ultracold ${174}$Yb$+$ ions and ${40}$Ca atoms held in a hybrid trap. We measure, and theoretically reproduce, a chemical reaction rate constant of $ \rm \bf K =(2\pm1.3)\times10{-10} cm{3}s{-1}$ for $ \rm \bf 1 mK \leq T \leq 10 K$, four orders of magnitude higher than reported for other heteronuclear cases. We also offer a possible explanation for the apparent contradiction between typical theoretical predictions and measurements of the radiative association process in this and other systems.

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