Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park and NIST, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Rep Prog Phys. 2017 Jan;80(1):017001. doi: 10.1088/0034-4885/80/1/017001. Epub 2016 Nov 17.
By photoionizing samples of laser-cooled atoms with laser light tuned just above the ionization limit, plasmas can be created with electron and ion temperatures below 10 K. These ultracold neutral plasmas have extended the temperature bounds of plasma physics by two orders of magnitude. Table-top experiments, using many of the tools from atomic physics, allow for the study of plasma phenomena in this new regime with independent control over the density and temperature of the plasma through the excitation process. Characteristic of these systems is an inhomogeneous density profile, inherited from the density distribution of the laser-cooled neutral atom sample. Most work has dealt with unconfined plasmas in vacuum, which expand outward at velocities of order 100 m/s, governed by electron pressure, and with lifetimes of order 100 μs, limited by stray electric fields. Using detection of charged particles and optical detection techniques, a wide variety of properties and phenomena have been observed, including expansion dynamics, collective excitations in both the electrons and ions, and collisional properties. Through three-body recombination collisions, the plasmas rapidly form Rydberg atoms, and clouds of cold Rydberg atoms have been observed to spontaneously avalanche ionize to form plasmas. Of particular interest is the possibility of the formation of strongly coupled plasmas, where Coulomb forces dominate thermal motion and correlations become important. The strongest impediment to strong coupling is disorder-induced heating, a process in which Coulomb energy from an initially disordered sample is converted into thermal energy. This restricts electrons to a weakly coupled regime and leaves the ions barely within the strongly coupled regime. This review will give an overview of the field of ultracold neutral plasmas, from its inception in 1999 to current work, including efforts to increase strong coupling and effects on plasma properties due to strong coupling.
通过将激光冷却原子样品用光离子化,所用激光的波长调谐到刚好高于电离极限,就可以产生电子和离子温度低于 10 K 的等离体。这些超冷中性等离体体将等离子体物理学的温度范围扩展了两个数量级。利用来自原子物理学的许多工具的台式实验允许在这个新的区域中通过激发过程独立地控制等离子体的密度和温度来研究等离子体现象。这些系统的特点是具有非均匀密度分布,这种分布继承自激光冷却中性原子样品的密度分布。大多数工作都涉及到在真空中的无约束等离子体,这些等离子体以 100 m/s 量级的速度向外膨胀,由电子压力控制,其寿命约为 100 μs,受杂散电场限制。利用带电粒子的检测和光学检测技术,已经观察到了广泛的性质和现象,包括膨胀动力学、电子和离子中的集体激发以及碰撞性质。通过三体复合碰撞,等离子体迅速形成里德伯原子,并且已经观察到冷里德伯原子云自发地雪崩电离形成等离子体。特别有趣的是形成强耦合等离子体的可能性,其中库仑力支配热运动,相关性变得重要。强耦合的最大障碍是无序诱导加热,这个过程中,初始无序的样品中的库仑能量被转化为热能。这将电子限制在弱耦合区域,而使离子几乎处于强耦合区域。本综述将介绍从 1999 年开始到目前的工作的超冷中性等离子体领域,包括增加强耦合的努力以及强耦合对等离子体性质的影响。