fbpx
Wikipedia

Rydberg atom

A Rydberg atom is an excited atom with one or more electrons that have a very high principal quantum number, n.[1][2] The higher the value of n, the farther the electron is from the nucleus, on average. Rydberg atoms have a number of peculiar properties including an exaggerated response to electric and magnetic fields,[3] long decay periods and electron wavefunctions that approximate, under some conditions, classical orbits of electrons about the nuclei.[4] The core electrons shield the outer electron from the electric field of the nucleus such that, from a distance, the electric potential looks identical to that experienced by the electron in a hydrogen atom.[5]

Figure 1: Electron orbital of a Rydberg atom with n=12. Colors show the quantum phase of the highly excited electron.
Figure 2: Energy levels in atomic lithium showing the Rydberg series of the lowest 3 values of orbital angular momentum converging on the first ionization energy.

In spite of its shortcomings, the Bohr model of the atom is useful in explaining these properties. Classically, an electron in a circular orbit of radius r, about a hydrogen nucleus of charge +e, obeys Newton's second law:

where k = 1/(4πε0).

Orbital momentum is quantized in units of ħ:

.

Combining these two equations leads to Bohr's expression for the orbital radius in terms of the principal quantum number, n:

It is now apparent why Rydberg atoms have such peculiar properties: the radius of the orbit scales as n2 (the n = 137 state of hydrogen has an atomic radius ~1 µm) and the geometric cross-section as n4. Thus, Rydberg atoms are extremely large, with loosely bound valence electrons, easily perturbed or ionized by collisions or external fields.

Because the binding energy of a Rydberg electron is proportional to 1/r and hence falls off like 1/n2, the energy level spacing falls off like 1/n3 leading to ever more closely spaced levels converging on the first ionization energy. These closely spaced Rydberg states form what is commonly referred to as the Rydberg series. Figure 2 shows some of the energy levels of the lowest three values of orbital angular momentum in lithium.

History edit

The existence of the Rydberg series was first demonstrated in 1885 when Johann Balmer discovered a simple empirical formula for the wavelengths of light associated with transitions in atomic hydrogen. Three years later, the Swedish physicist Johannes Rydberg presented a generalized and more intuitive version of Balmer's formula that came to be known as the Rydberg formula. This formula indicated the existence of an infinite series of ever more closely spaced discrete energy levels converging on a finite limit.[6]

This series was qualitatively explained in 1913 by Niels Bohr with his semiclassical model of the hydrogen atom in which quantized values of angular momentum lead to the observed discrete energy levels.[7][8] A full quantitative derivation of the observed spectrum was derived by Wolfgang Pauli in 1926 following development of quantum mechanics by Werner Heisenberg and others.

Methods of production edit

The only truly stable state of a hydrogen-like atom is the ground state with n = 1. The study of Rydberg states requires a reliable technique for exciting ground state atoms to states with a large value of n.

Electron impact excitation edit

Much early experimental work on Rydberg atoms relied on the use of collimated beams of fast electrons incident on ground-state atoms.[9]Inelastic scattering processes can use the electron kinetic energy to increase the atoms' internal energy exciting to a broad range of different states including many high-lying Rydberg states,

 .

Because the electron can retain any arbitrary amount of its initial kinetic energy, this process results in a population with a broad spread of different energies.

Charge exchange excitation edit

Another mainstay of early Rydberg atom experiments relied on charge exchange between a beam of ions and a population of neutral atoms of another species, resulting in the formation of a beam of highly excited atoms,[10]

 .

Again, because the kinetic energy of the interaction can contribute to the final internal energies of the constituents, this technique populates a broad range of energy levels.

Optical excitation edit

The arrival of tunable dye lasers in the 1970s allowed a much greater level of control over populations of excited atoms. In optical excitation, the incident photon is absorbed by the target atom, resulting in a precise final state energy. The problem of producing single state, mono-energetic populations of Rydberg atoms thus becomes the somewhat simpler problem of precisely controlling the frequency of the laser output,

 .

This form of direct optical excitation is generally limited to experiments with the alkali metals, because the ground state binding energy in other species is generally too high to be accessible with most laser systems.

For atoms with a large valence electron binding energy (equivalent to a large first ionization energy), the excited states of the Rydberg series are inaccessible with conventional laser systems. Initial collisional excitation can make up the energy shortfall allowing optical excitation to be used to select the final state. Although the initial step excites to a broad range of intermediate states, the precision inherent in the optical excitation process means that the laser light only interacts with a specific subset of atoms in a particular state, exciting to the chosen final state.

Hydrogenic potential edit

 
Figure 3. A comparison of the potential in a hydrogen atom with that in a Rydberg state of a different atom. A large core polarizability has been used in order to make the effect clear. The black curve is the Coulombic 1/r potential of the hydrogen atom while the dashed red curve includes the 1/r4 term due to polarization of the ion core.

An atom in a Rydberg state has a valence electron in a large orbit far from the ion core; in such an orbit, the outermost electron feels an almost hydrogenic Coulomb potential, UC, from a compact ion core consisting of a nucleus with Z protons and the lower electron shells filled with Z-1 electrons. An electron in the spherically symmetric Coulomb potential has potential energy:

 .

The similarity of the effective potential "seen" by the outer electron to the hydrogen potential is a defining characteristic of Rydberg states and explains why the electron wavefunctions approximate to classical orbits in the limit of the correspondence principle.[11] In other words, the electron's orbit resembles the orbit of planets inside a solar system, similar to what was seen in the obsolete but visually useful Bohr and Rutherford models of the atom.

There are three notable exceptions that can be characterized by the additional term added to the potential energy:

  • An atom may have two (or more) electrons in highly excited states with comparable orbital radii. In this case, the electron-electron interaction gives rise to a significant deviation from the hydrogen potential.[12] For an atom in a multiple Rydberg state, the additional term, Uee, includes a summation of each pair of highly excited electrons:
 .
  • If the valence electron has very low angular momentum (interpreted classically as an extremely eccentric elliptical orbit), then it may pass close enough to polarise the ion core, giving rise to a 1/r4 core polarization term in the potential.[13] The interaction between an induced dipole and the charge that produces it is always attractive so this contribution is always negative,
 ,
where αd is the dipole polarizability. Figure 3 shows how the polarization term modifies the potential close to the nucleus.
  • If the outer electron penetrates the inner electron shells, it will “see” more of the charge of the nucleus and hence experience a greater force. In general, the modification to the potential energy is not simple to calculate and must be based on knowledge of the geometry of the ion core.[14]

Quantum-mechanical details edit

 
Figure 4. Semiclassical orbits for n=5 with all allowed values of orbital angular momentum. The black spot denotes the position of the atomic nucleus.

Quantum-mechanically, a state with abnormally high n refers to an atom in which the valence electron(s) have been excited into a formerly unpopulated electron orbital with higher energy and lower binding energy. In hydrogen the binding energy is given by:

 ,

where Ry = 13.6 eV is the Rydberg constant. The low binding energy at high values of n explains why Rydberg states are susceptible to ionization.

Additional terms in the potential energy expression for a Rydberg state, on top of the hydrogenic Coulomb potential energy require the introduction of a quantum defect,[5] δl, into the expression for the binding energy:

 .

Electron wavefunctions edit

The long lifetimes of Rydberg states with high orbital angular momentum can be explained in terms of the overlapping of wavefunctions. The wavefunction of an electron in a high l state (high angular momentum, “circular orbit”) has very little overlap with the wavefunctions of the inner electrons and hence remains relatively unperturbed.

The three exceptions to the definition of a Rydberg atom as an atom with a hydrogenic potential, have an alternative, quantum mechanical description that can be characterized by the additional term(s) in the atomic Hamiltonian:

  • If a second electron is excited into a state ni, energetically close to the state of the outer electron no, then its wavefunction becomes almost as large as the first (a double Rydberg state). This occurs as ni approaches no and leads to a condition where the size of the two electron’s orbits are related;[12] a condition sometimes referred to as radial correlation.[1] An electron-electron repulsion term must be included in the atomic Hamiltonian.
  • Polarization of the ion core produces an anisotropic potential that causes an angular correlation between the motions of the two outermost electrons.[1][15] This can be thought of as a tidal locking effect due to a non-spherically symmetric potential. A core polarization term must be included in the atomic Hamiltonian.
  • The wavefunction of the outer electron in states with low orbital angular momentum l, is periodically localised within the shells of inner electrons and interacts with the full charge of the nucleus.[14]Figure 4 shows a semi-classical interpretation of angular momentum states in an electron orbital, illustrating that low-l states pass closer to the nucleus potentially penetrating the ion core. A core penetration term must be added to the atomic Hamiltonian.

In external fields edit

 
Figure 5. Computed energy level spectra of hydrogen in an electric field near n=15.[16] The potential energy found in the electronic Hamiltonian for hydrogen is the 1/r Coulomb potential (there is no quantum defect) which does not couple the different Stark states. Consequently the energy levels from adjacent n-manifolds cross at the Inglis–Teller limit.
 
Figure 6. Computed energy level spectra of lithium in an electric field near n=15.[16] The presence of an ion-core that can be polarized and penetrated by the Rydberg electron adds additional terms to the electronic Hamiltonian (resulting in a finite quantum defect) leading to coupling of the different Stark states and hence avoided crossings of the energy levels.

The large separation between the electron and ion-core in a Rydberg atom makes possible an extremely large electric dipole moment, d. There is an energy associated with the presence of an electric dipole in an electric field, F, known in atomic physics as a Stark shift,

 

Depending on the sign of the projection of the dipole moment onto the local electric field vector, a state may have energy that increases or decreases with field strength (low-field and high-field seeking states respectively). The narrow spacing between adjacent n-levels in the Rydberg series means that states can approach degeneracy even for relatively modest field strengths. The theoretical field strength at which a crossing would occur assuming no coupling between the states is given by the Inglis–Teller limit,[17]

 

In the hydrogen atom, the pure 1/r Coulomb potential does not couple Stark states from adjacent n-manifolds resulting in real crossings as shown in figure 5. The presence of additional terms in the potential energy can lead to coupling resulting in avoided crossings as shown for lithium in figure 6.

Applications and further research edit

Precision measurements of trapped Rydberg atoms edit

The radiative decay lifetimes of atoms in metastable states to the ground state are important to understanding astrophysics observations and tests of the standard model.[18]

Investigating diamagnetic effects edit

The large sizes and low binding energies of Rydberg atoms lead to a high magnetic susceptibility,  . As diamagnetic effects scale with the area of the orbit and the area is proportional to the radius squared (An4), effects impossible to detect in ground state atoms become obvious in Rydberg atoms, which demonstrate very large diamagnetic shifts.[19]

Rydberg atoms exhibit strong electric-dipole coupling of the atoms to electromagnetic fields and has been used to detect radio communications.[20][21]

In plasmas edit

Rydberg atoms form commonly in plasmas due to the recombination of electrons and positive ions; low energy recombination results in fairly stable Rydberg atoms, while recombination of electrons and positive ions with high kinetic energy often form autoionising Rydberg states. Rydberg atoms’ large sizes and susceptibility to perturbation and ionisation by electric and magnetic fields, are an important factor determining the properties of plasmas.[22]

Condensation of Rydberg atoms forms Rydberg matter, most often observed in form of long-lived clusters. The de-excitation is significantly impeded in Rydberg matter by exchange-correlation effects in the non-uniform electron liquid formed on condensation by the collective valence electrons, which causes extended lifetime of clusters.[23]

In astrophysics (Radio recombination lines) edit

Rydberg atoms occur in space due to the dynamic equilibrium between photoionization by hot stars and recombination with electrons, which at these very low densities usually proceeds via the electron re-joining the atom in a very high n state, and then gradually dropping through the energy levels to the ground state, giving rise to a sequence of recombination spectral lines spread across the electromagnetic spectrum. The very small differences in energy between Rydberg states differing in n by one or a few means that photons emitted in transitions between such states have low frequencies and long wavelengths, even up to radio waves. The first detection of such a radio recombination line (RRL) was by Soviet radio astronomers in 1964; the line, designated H90α, was emitted by hydrogen atoms in the n = 90 state. [24] Today, Rydberg atoms of hydrogen, helium and carbon in space are routinely observed via RRLs, the brightest of which are the Hnα lines corresponding to transitions from n+1 to n. Weaker lines, Hnβ and Hnγ, with Δn = 2 and 3 are also observed. Corresponding lines for helium and carbon are Henα, Cnα, and so on.[25] The discovery of lines with n > 100 was surprising, as even in the very low densities of interstellar space, many orders of magnitude lower than the best laboratory vacuums attainable on Earth, it had been expected that such highly-excited atoms would be frequently destroyed by collisions, rendering the lines unobservable. Improved theoretical analysis showed that this effect had been overestimated, although collisional broadening does eventually limit detectability of the lines at very high n..[25] The record wavelength for hydrogen is λ = 73 cm for H253α, implying atomic diameters of a few microns, and for carbon, λ = 18  metres, from C732α,[26] from atoms with a diameter of 57 micron.

RRLs from hydrogen and helium are produced in highly ionized regions (H II regions and the Warm Ionised Medium). Carbon has a lower ionization energy than hydrogen, and so singly-ionized carbon atoms, and the corresponding recombining Rydberg states, exist further from the ionizing stars, in so-called C II regions which form thick shells around H II regions. The larger volume partially compensates for the low abundance of C compared to H, making the carbon RRLs detectable.

In the absence of collisional broadening, the wavelengths of RRLs are modified only by the Doppler effect, so the measured wavelength,  , is usually converted to radial velocity,  , where   is the rest-frame wavelength. H II regions in our Galaxy can have radial velocities up to ±150 km/s, due to their motion relative to Earth as both orbit the centre of the Galaxy.[27] These motions are regular enough that   can be used to estimate the position of the H II region on the line of sight and so its 3D position in the Galaxy. Because all astrophysical Rydberg atoms are hydrogenic, the frequencies of transitions for H, He, and C are given by the same formula, except for the slightly different reduced mass of the valence electron for each element. This gives helium and carbon lines apparent Doppler shifts of −100 and −140 km/s, respectively, relative to the corresponding hydrogen line.

RRLs are used to detect ionized gas in distant regions of our Galaxy, and also in external galaxies, because the radio photons are not absorbed by interstellar dust, which blocks photons from the more familiar optical transitions.[28] They are also used to measure the temperature of the ionized gas, via the ratio of line intensity to the continuum bremsstrahlung emission from the plasma.[25] Since the temperature of H II regions is regulated by line emission from heavier elements such as C, N, and O, recombination lines also indirectly measure their abundance (metallicity). [29]

RRLs are spread across the radio spectrum with relatively small intervals in wavelength between them, so they frequently occur in radio spectral observations primarily targeted at other spectral lines. For instance, H166α, H167α, and H168α are very close in wavelength to the 21-cm line from neutral hydrogen. This allows radio astronomers to study both the neutral and the ionized interstellar medium from the same set of observations.[30] Since RRLs are numerous and weak, common practice is to average the velocity spectra of several neighbouring lines, to improve sensitivity.

There are a variety of other potential applications of Rydberg atoms in cosmology and astrophysics.[31]

Strongly interacting systems edit

Due to their large size, Rydberg atoms can exhibit very large electric dipole moments. Calculations using perturbation theory show that this results in strong interactions between two close Rydberg atoms. Coherent control of these interactions combined with their relatively long lifetime makes them a suitable candidate to realize a quantum computer.[32] In 2010 two-qubit gates were achieved experimentally.[33][34] Strongly interacting Rydberg atoms also feature quantum critical behavior, which makes them interesting to study on their own.[35]

Current research directions edit

Since 2000's Rydberg atoms research encompasses broadly five directions: sensing, quantum optics,[36][37][38][39][40][41] quantum computation,[42][43][44][45] quantum simulation[46][2][47][48] and quantum matters.[49][50] High electric dipole moments between Rydberg atomic states are used for radio frequency and terahertz sensing and imaging,[51][52] including non-demolition measurements of individual microwave photons.[53] Electromagnetically induced transparency was used in combination with strong interactions between two atoms excited in Rydberg state to provide medium that exhibits strongly nonlinear behaviour at the level of individual optical photons.[54][55] The tuneable interaction between Rydberg states, enabled also first quantum simulation experiments.[56][57]

In October 2018, the United States Army Research Laboratory publicly discussed efforts to develop a super wideband radio receiver using Rydberg atoms.[58] In March 2020, the laboratory announced that its scientists analysed the Rydberg sensor's sensitivity to oscillating electric fields over an enormous range of frequencies—from 0 to 1012 Hertz (the spectrum to 0.3mm wavelength). The Rydberg sensor can reliably detect signals over the entire spectrum and compare favourably with other established electric field sensor technologies, such as electro-optic crystals and dipole antenna-coupled passive electronics.[59][60]

Classical simulation edit

 
Figure 7. Stark - Coulomb potential for a Rydberg atom in a static electric field. An electron in such a potential feels a torque that can change its angular momentum.
 
Figure 8. Trajectory of the electron in a hydrogen atom in an electric field E = -3 x 106 V/m in the x-direction. Note that classically all values of angular momentum are allowed; figure 4 shows the particular orbits associated with quantum mechanically allowed values. See the animation.

A simple 1/r potential results in a closed Keplerian elliptical orbit. In the presence of an external electric field Rydberg atoms can obtain very large electric dipole moments making them extremely susceptible to perturbation by the field. Figure 7 shows how application of an external electric field (known in atomic physics as a Stark field) changes the geometry of the potential, dramatically changing the behaviour of the electron. A Coulombic potential does not apply any torque as the force is always antiparallel to the position vector (always pointing along a line running between the electron and the nucleus):

 ,
 .

With the application of a static electric field, the electron feels a continuously changing torque. The resulting trajectory becomes progressively more distorted over time, eventually going through the full range of angular momentum from L = LMAX, to a straight line L=0, to the initial orbit in the opposite sense L = -LMAX.[61]

The time period of the oscillation in angular momentum (the time to complete the trajectory in figure 8), almost exactly matches the quantum mechanically predicted period for the wavefunction to return to its initial state, demonstrating the classical nature of the Rydberg atom.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Gallagher, Thomas F. (1994). Rydberg Atoms. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-02166-1.
  2. ^ a b Šibalić, Nikola; S Adams, Charles (2018). Rydberg Physics. IOP Publishing. Bibcode:2018ryph.book.....S. doi:10.1088/978-0-7503-1635-4. ISBN 9780750316354.
  3. ^ Metcalf Research Group (2004-11-08). . Stony Brook University. Archived from the original on August 26, 2005. Retrieved 2008-07-30.
  4. ^ J. Murray-Krezan (2008). "The classical dynamics of Rydberg Stark atoms in momentum space". American Journal of Physics. 76 (11): 1007–1011. Bibcode:2008AmJPh..76.1007M. doi:10.1119/1.2961081.
  5. ^ a b Nolan, James (2005-05-31). . Davidson College. Archived from the original on 2015-12-06. Retrieved 2008-07-30.
  6. ^ I. Martinson; et al. (2005). "Janne Rydberg – his life and work". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B. 235 (1–4): 17–22. Bibcode:2005NIMPB.235...17M. doi:10.1016/j.nimb.2005.03.137.
  7. ^ "The Bohr Model". University of Tennessee, Knoxville. 2000-08-10. Retrieved 2009-11-25.
  8. ^ Niels Bohr (1922-12-11). "The Structure of the Atom" (PDF). Nobel Lecture. Retrieved 2018-11-16.
  9. ^ J. Olmsted (1967). "Excitation of nitrogen triplet states by electron impact". Radiation Research. 31 (2): 191–200. Bibcode:1967RadR...31..191O. doi:10.2307/3572319. JSTOR 3572319. PMID 6025857.
  10. ^ M. Haugh, et al. (1966). "Electronic excitation accompanying charge exchange". Journal of Chemical Physics. 44 (2): 837–839. Bibcode:1966JChPh..44..837H. doi:10.1063/1.1726773.
  11. ^ T. P. Hezel, et al. (1992). "Classical view of the properties of Rydberg atoms: Application of the correspondence principle". American Journal of Physics. 60 (4): 329–335. Bibcode:1992AmJPh..60..329H. doi:10.1119/1.16876.
  12. ^ a b I. K. Dmitrieva; et al. (1993). "Energies of Doubly Excited States. The Double Rydberg Formula". Journal of Applied Spectroscopy. 59 (1–2): 466–470. Bibcode:1993JApSp..59..466D. doi:10.1007/BF00663353. S2CID 96628309.
  13. ^ L. Neale; et al. (1995). "Core Polarization in Kr VIII". Physical Review A. 51 (5): 4272–4275. Bibcode:1995PhRvA..51.4272N. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.51.4272. PMID 9912104.
  14. ^ a b C. E. Theodosiou (1983). "Evaluation of penetration effects in high-l Rydberg states". Physical Review A. 28 (5): 3098–3101. Bibcode:1983PhRvA..28.3098T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.28.3098.
  15. ^ T. A. Heim; et al. (1995). "Excitation of high-lying pair-Rydberg states". Journal of Physics B. 28 (24): 5309–5315. Bibcode:1995JPhB...28.5309H. doi:10.1088/0953-4075/28/24/015. S2CID 250862926.
  16. ^ a b M. Courtney, et al. (1995). "Classical, semiclassical, and quantum dynamics of lithium in an electric field". Physical Review A. 51 (5): 3604–3620. Bibcode:1995PhRvA..51.3604C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.51.3604. PMID 9912027.
  17. ^ D.R. Inglis; et al. (1939). "Ionic Depression of Series Limits in One-Electron Spectra". Astrophysical Journal. 90: 439. Bibcode:1939ApJ....90..439I. doi:10.1086/144118.
  18. ^ Nicholas D. Guise; et al. (Apr 24, 2014). "Measurement of the Kr xviii 3d 2D5/2 lifetime at low energy in a unitary Penning trap". Physical Review A. 89 (4): 040502. arXiv:1404.6181. Bibcode:2014PhRvA..89d0502G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.89.040502. S2CID 54090132.
  19. ^ J. Neukammer, et al. (1984). "Diamagnetic shift and singlet-triplet mixing of 6snp Yb Rydberg states with large radial extent". Physical Review A. 30 (2): 1142–1144. Bibcode:1984PhRvA..30.1142N. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.30.1142.
  20. ^ Anderson, David A.; et al. (2021). "An Atomic Receiver for AM and FM Radio Communication". IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. 69 (5): 2455–2462. arXiv:1808.08589. Bibcode:2021ITAP...69.2455A. doi:10.1109/TAP.2020.2987112. S2CID 118828101.
  21. ^ Oullette, Jennifer (19 September 2018). "A new antenna using single atoms could usher in the age of atomic radio". Ars Technica. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  22. ^ G. Vitrant, et al. (1982). "Rydberg to plasma evolution in a dense gas of very excited atoms". Journal of Physics B. 15 (2): L49–L55. Bibcode:1982JPhB...15L..49V. doi:10.1088/0022-3700/15/2/004.
  23. ^ E. A. Manykin, et al. (2006). "Rydberg matter: properties and decay". Proceedings of the SPIE. SPIE Proceedings. 6181 (5): 618105–618105–9. Bibcode:2006SPIE.6181E..05M. doi:10.1117/12.675004. S2CID 96732651.
  24. ^ Sorochenko, R. L.; Borodzich, É. V. (1965). "Detection of a Radio Line Due to Excited Hydrogen in the Nebula NGC 6618 (Omega)". Soviet Physics Doklady. 10: 588. Bibcode:1966SPhD...10..588S.
  25. ^ a b c Gordon, M.A.; Sorochenko, R.L. (2009). "Radio Recombination Lines". Astrophysics and Space Science Library. 282. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-09691-9. ISBN 978-0-387-09604-9. ISSN 0067-0057.
  26. ^ Konovalenko, A. A. (1984). "Observations of carbon recombination lines at decametric wavelengths in the direction of Cassiopeia". Pisma V Astronomicheskii Zhurnal (Soviet Astronomy Letters). 10: 353–356. Bibcode:1984PAZh...10..846K.
  27. ^ Wenger, Trey V.; Dawson, J. R.; Dickey, John M.; Jordan, C. H.; McClure–Griffiths, N. M.; Anderson, L. D.; Armentrout, W. P.; Balser, Dana S.; Bania, T. M. (2021-06-01). "The Southern H II Region Discovery Survey. II. The Full Catalog". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 254 (2): 36. arXiv:2103.12199. Bibcode:2021ApJS..254...36W. doi:10.3847/1538-4365/abf4d4. hdl:1885/287773. ISSN 0067-0049.
  28. ^ Anderson, L. D.; Luisi, Matteo; Liu, Bin; Wenger, Trey V.; Balser, Dana. S.; Bania, T. M.; Haffner, L. M.; Linville, Dylan J.; Mascoop, J. L. (2021-06-01). "The GBT Diffuse Ionized Gas Survey (GDIGS): Survey Overview and First Data Release". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 254 (2): 28. arXiv:2103.10466. Bibcode:2021ApJS..254...28A. doi:10.3847/1538-4365/abef65. ISSN 0067-0049.
  29. ^ Wenger, Trey V.; Balser, Dana S.; Anderson, L. D.; Bania, T. M. (2019-12-16). "Metallicity Structure in the Milky Way Disk Revealed by Galactic H ii Regions". The Astrophysical Journal. 887 (2): 114. arXiv:1910.14605. Bibcode:2019ApJ...887..114W. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab53d3. ISSN 1538-4357.
  30. ^ Alves, Marta I. R.; Calabretta, Mark; Davies, Rodney D.; Dickinson, Clive; Staveley-Smith, Lister; Davis, Richard J.; Chen, Tianyue; Barr, Adam (2015-06-21). "The HIPASS survey of the Galactic plane in radio recombination lines". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 450 (2): 2025–2042. arXiv:1411.4497. doi:10.1093/mnras/stv751. ISSN 1365-2966.
  31. ^ Y. N. Gnedin, et al. (2009). "Rydberg atoms in astrophysics". New Astronomy Reviews. 53 (7–10): 259–265. arXiv:1208.2516. Bibcode:2009NewAR..53..259G. doi:10.1016/j.newar.2009.07.003. S2CID 119276100.
  32. ^ D. Jaksch, et al. (2000). "Fast Quantum Gates for Neutral Atoms". Physical Review Letters. 85 (10): 2208–11. arXiv:quant-ph/0004038. Bibcode:2000PhRvL..85.2208J. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.2208. PMID 10970499. S2CID 16713798.
  33. ^ T. Wilk, et al. (2010). "Entanglement of Two Individual Neutral Atoms Using Rydberg Blockade". Physical Review Letters. 104 (1): 010502. arXiv:0908.0454. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104a0502W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.010502. PMID 20366354. S2CID 16384272.
  34. ^ L. Isenhower, et al. (2010). "Demonstration of a Neutral Atom Controlled-NOT Quantum Gate". Physical Review Letters. 104 (1): 010503. arXiv:0907.5552. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104a0503I. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.010503. PMID 20366355. S2CID 2091127.
  35. ^ H. Weimer, et al. (2008). "Quantum Critical Behavior in Strongly Interacting Rydberg Gases". Physical Review Letters. 101 (25): 250601. arXiv:0806.3754. Bibcode:2008PhRvL.101y0601W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.101.250601. PMID 19113686. S2CID 28636728.
  36. ^ Tiarks, Daniel; Schmidt-Eberle, Steffen; Stolz, Thomas; Rempe, Gerhard; Dürr, Stephan (February 2019). "A photon–photon quantum gate based on Rydberg interactions". Nature Physics. 15 (2): 124–126. arXiv:1807.05795. doi:10.1038/s41567-018-0313-7. ISSN 1745-2473. S2CID 54072181.
  37. ^ Khazali, Mohammadsadegh; Murray, Callum R.; Pohl, Thomas (2019-09-13). "Polariton Exchange Interactions in Multichannel Optical Networks". Physical Review Letters. 123 (11): 113605. arXiv:1903.12442. Bibcode:2019PhRvL.123k3605K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.113605. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 31573258. S2CID 202577976.
  38. ^ Gorshkov, Alexey V.; Otterbach, Johannes; Fleischhauer, Michael; Pohl, Thomas; Lukin, Mikhail D. (2011-09-22). "Photon-Photon Interactions via Rydberg Blockade". Physical Review Letters. 107 (13): 133602. arXiv:1103.3700. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.107m3602G. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.107.133602. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 22026852. S2CID 11681713.
  39. ^ Khazali, Mohammadsadegh; Heshami, Khabat; Simon, Christoph (2015-03-17). "Photon-photon gate via the interaction between two collective Rydberg excitations". Physical Review A. 91 (3): 030301. arXiv:1407.7510. Bibcode:2015PhRvA..91c0301K. doi:10.1103/physreva.91.030301. ISSN 1050-2947. S2CID 118859994.
  40. ^ Friedler, Inbal; Petrosyan, David; Fleischhauer, Michael; Kurizki, Gershon (2005-10-05). "Long-range interactions and entanglement of slow single-photon pulses". Physical Review A. 72 (4): 043803. arXiv:quant-ph/0503071. Bibcode:2005PhRvA..72d3803F. doi:10.1103/physreva.72.043803. ISSN 1050-2947. S2CID 30993913.
  41. ^ Paredes-Barato, D.; Adams, C. S. (2014-01-28). "All-Optical Quantum Information Processing Using Rydberg Gates". Physical Review Letters. 112 (4): 040501. arXiv:1309.7933. Bibcode:2014PhRvL.112d0501P. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.112.040501. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 24580425. S2CID 19020862.
  42. ^ Lukin, M. D.; Fleischhauer, M.; Cote, R.; Duan, L. M.; Jaksch, D.; Cirac, J. I.; Zoller, P. (2001-06-26). "Dipole Blockade and Quantum Information Processing in Mesoscopic Atomic Ensembles". Physical Review Letters. 87 (3): 037901. arXiv:quant-ph/0011028. Bibcode:2001PhRvL..87c7901L. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.87.037901. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 11461592. S2CID 13452668.
  43. ^ Jaksch, D.; Cirac, J. I.; Zoller, P.; Rolston, S. L.; Côté, R.; Lukin, M. D. (2000-09-04). "Fast Quantum Gates for Neutral Atoms". Physical Review Letters. 85 (10): 2208–2211. arXiv:quant-ph/0004038. Bibcode:2000PhRvL..85.2208J. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.85.2208. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 10970499. S2CID 16713798.
  44. ^ Saffman, M.; Walker, T. G.; Mølmer, K. (2010-08-18). "Quantum information with Rydberg atoms". Reviews of Modern Physics. 82 (3): 2313–2363. arXiv:0909.4777. Bibcode:2010RvMP...82.2313S. doi:10.1103/revmodphys.82.2313. ISSN 0034-6861. S2CID 14285764.
  45. ^ Khazali, Mohammadsadegh; Mølmer, Klaus (2020-06-11). "Fast Multiqubit Gates by Adiabatic Evolution in Interacting Excited-State Manifolds of Rydberg Atoms and Superconducting Circuits". Physical Review X. 10 (2): 021054. arXiv:2006.07035. Bibcode:2020PhRvX..10b1054K. doi:10.1103/physrevx.10.021054. ISSN 2160-3308.
  46. ^ Weimer, Hendrik; Müller, Markus; Lesanovsky, Igor; Zoller, Peter; Büchler, Hans Peter (2010-03-14). "A Rydberg quantum simulator". Nature Physics. 6 (5): 382–388. arXiv:0907.1657. Bibcode:2010NatPh...6..382W. doi:10.1038/nphys1614. ISSN 1745-2473. S2CID 54710282.
  47. ^ Khazali, Mohammadsadegh (2022-03-03). "Discrete-Time Quantum-Walk & Floquet Topological Insulators via Distance-Selective Rydberg-Interaction". Quantum. 6: 664. arXiv:2101.11412. Bibcode:2022Quant...6..664K. doi:10.22331/q-2022-03-03-664. S2CID 246635019.
  48. ^ Dauphin, A.; Müller, M.; Martin-Delgado, M. A. (2012-11-20). "Rydberg-atom quantum simulation and Chern-number characterization of a topological Mott insulator". Physical Review A. 86 (5): 053618. arXiv:1207.6373. Bibcode:2012PhRvA..86e3618D. doi:10.1103/physreva.86.053618. ISSN 1050-2947. S2CID 55200016.
  49. ^ Khazali, Mohammadsadegh (2021-08-05). "Rydberg noisy dressing and applications in making soliton molecules and droplet quasicrystals". Physical Review Research. 3 (3): L032033. arXiv:2007.01039. Bibcode:2021PhRvR...3c2033K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.L032033. ISSN 2643-1564. S2CID 220301701.
  50. ^ Henkel, N.; Cinti, F.; Jain, P.; Pupillo, G.; Pohl, T. (2012-06-26). "Supersolid Vortex Crystals in Rydberg-Dressed Bose-Einstein Condensates". Physical Review Letters. 108 (26): 265301. arXiv:1111.5761. Bibcode:2012PhRvL.108z5301H. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.108.265301. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 23004994. S2CID 1782501.
  51. ^ Sedlacek, Jonathon A.; Schwettmann, Arne; Kübler, Harald; Löw, Robert; Pfau, Tilman; Shaffer, James P. (2012-09-16). "Microwave electrometry with Rydberg atoms in a vapour cell using bright atomic resonances". Nature Physics. 8 (11): 819–824. Bibcode:2012NatPh...8..819S. doi:10.1038/nphys2423. ISSN 1745-2473. S2CID 121120666.
  52. ^ Wade, C. G.; Šibalić, N.; de Melo, N. R.; Kondo, J. M.; Adams, C. S.; Weatherill, K. J. (2016-11-07). "Real-time near-field terahertz imaging with atomic optical fluorescence". Nature Photonics. 11 (1): 40–43. arXiv:1603.07107. doi:10.1038/nphoton.2016.214. ISSN 1749-4885. S2CID 119212524.
  53. ^ Nogues, G.; Rauschenbeutel, A.; Osnaghi, S.; Brune, M.; Raimond, J. M.; Haroche, S. (1999). "Seeing a single photon without destroying it". Nature. 400 (6741): 239–242. Bibcode:1999Natur.400..239N. doi:10.1038/22275. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4367650.
  54. ^ Pritchard, J. D.; Maxwell, D.; Gauguet, A.; Weatherill, K. J.; Jones, M. P. A.; Adams, C. S. (2010-11-05). "Cooperative Atom-Light Interaction in a Blockaded Rydberg Ensemble". Physical Review Letters. 105 (19): 193603. arXiv:0911.3523. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.105s3603P. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.105.193603. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 21231168. S2CID 12217031.
  55. ^ Firstenberg, Ofer; Peyronel, Thibault; Liang, Qi-Yu; Gorshkov, Alexey V.; Lukin, Mikhail D.; Vuletić, Vladan (2013-09-25). "Attractive photons in a quantum nonlinear medium" (PDF). Nature. 502 (7469): 71–75. Bibcode:2013Natur.502...71F. doi:10.1038/nature12512. hdl:1721.1/91605. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 24067613. S2CID 1699899.
  56. ^ Schauß, P.; Zeiher, J.; Fukuhara, T.; Hild, S.; Cheneau, M.; Macrì, T.; Pohl, T.; Bloch, I.; Gross, C. (2015-03-27). "Crystallization in Ising quantum magnets". Science. 347 (6229): 1455–1458. arXiv:1404.0980. Bibcode:2015Sci...347.1455S. doi:10.1126/science.1258351. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 25814579. S2CID 28102735.
  57. ^ Labuhn, Henning; Barredo, Daniel; Ravets, Sylvain; de Léséleuc, Sylvain; Macrì, Tommaso; Lahaye, Thierry; Browaeys, Antoine (2016). "Tunable two-dimensional arrays of single Rydberg atoms for realizing quantum Ising models". Nature. 534 (7609): 667–670. arXiv:1509.04543. Bibcode:2016Natur.534..667L. doi:10.1038/nature18274. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 27281203. S2CID 4461633.
  58. ^ Army researchers make giant leap in quantum sensing, United States Army Research Laboratory, 2018-10-25
  59. ^ Scientists create quantum sensor that covers entire radio frequency spectrum, Phys.org/United States Army Research Laboratory, 2020-03-19
  60. ^ Meyer, David H.; Kunz, Paul D.; Cox, Kevin C. (2021). "Waveguide-Coupled Rydberg Spectrum Analyzer from 0 to 20 GHz". Physical Review Applied. 15 (1): 014053. arXiv:2009.14383. Bibcode:2021PhRvP..15a4053M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevApplied.15.014053. S2CID 222067191.
  61. ^ T. P. Hezel, et al. (1992). "Classical view of the Stark effect in hydrogen atoms". American Journal of Physics. 60 (4): 324–328. Bibcode:1992AmJPh..60..324H. doi:10.1119/1.16875.

rydberg, atom, excited, atom, with, more, electrons, that, have, very, high, principal, quantum, number, higher, value, farther, electron, from, nucleus, average, have, number, peculiar, properties, including, exaggerated, response, electric, magnetic, fields,. A Rydberg atom is an excited atom with one or more electrons that have a very high principal quantum number n 1 2 The higher the value of n the farther the electron is from the nucleus on average Rydberg atoms have a number of peculiar properties including an exaggerated response to electric and magnetic fields 3 long decay periods and electron wavefunctions that approximate under some conditions classical orbits of electrons about the nuclei 4 The core electrons shield the outer electron from the electric field of the nucleus such that from a distance the electric potential looks identical to that experienced by the electron in a hydrogen atom 5 Figure 1 Electron orbital of a Rydberg atom with n 12 Colors show the quantum phase of the highly excited electron Figure 2 Energy levels in atomic lithium showing the Rydberg series of the lowest 3 values of orbital angular momentum converging on the first ionization energy In spite of its shortcomings the Bohr model of the atom is useful in explaining these properties Classically an electron in a circular orbit of radius r about a hydrogen nucleus of charge e obeys Newton s second law F ma ke2r2 mv2r displaystyle mathbf F m mathbf a Rightarrow ke 2 over r 2 mv 2 over r where k 1 4pe0 Orbital momentum is quantized in units of ħ mvr nℏ displaystyle mvr n hbar Combining these two equations leads to Bohr s expression for the orbital radius in terms of the principal quantum number n r n2ℏ2ke2m displaystyle r n 2 hbar 2 over ke 2 m It is now apparent why Rydberg atoms have such peculiar properties the radius of the orbit scales as n2 the n 137 state of hydrogen has an atomic radius 1 µm and the geometric cross section as n4 Thus Rydberg atoms are extremely large with loosely bound valence electrons easily perturbed or ionized by collisions or external fields Because the binding energy of a Rydberg electron is proportional to 1 r and hence falls off like 1 n2 the energy level spacing falls off like 1 n3 leading to ever more closely spaced levels converging on the first ionization energy These closely spaced Rydberg states form what is commonly referred to as the Rydberg series Figure 2 shows some of the energy levels of the lowest three values of orbital angular momentum in lithium Contents 1 History 2 Methods of production 2 1 Electron impact excitation 2 2 Charge exchange excitation 2 3 Optical excitation 3 Hydrogenic potential 4 Quantum mechanical details 4 1 Electron wavefunctions 5 In external fields 6 Applications and further research 6 1 Precision measurements of trapped Rydberg atoms 6 2 Investigating diamagnetic effects 6 3 In plasmas 6 4 In astrophysics Radio recombination lines 6 5 Strongly interacting systems 6 6 Current research directions 7 Classical simulation 8 See also 9 ReferencesHistory editThe existence of the Rydberg series was first demonstrated in 1885 when Johann Balmer discovered a simple empirical formula for the wavelengths of light associated with transitions in atomic hydrogen Three years later the Swedish physicist Johannes Rydberg presented a generalized and more intuitive version of Balmer s formula that came to be known as the Rydberg formula This formula indicated the existence of an infinite series of ever more closely spaced discrete energy levels converging on a finite limit 6 This series was qualitatively explained in 1913 by Niels Bohr with his semiclassical model of the hydrogen atom in which quantized values of angular momentum lead to the observed discrete energy levels 7 8 A full quantitative derivation of the observed spectrum was derived by Wolfgang Pauli in 1926 following development of quantum mechanics by Werner Heisenberg and others Methods of production editThe only truly stable state of a hydrogen like atom is the ground state with n 1 The study of Rydberg states requires a reliable technique for exciting ground state atoms to states with a large value of n Electron impact excitation edit Much early experimental work on Rydberg atoms relied on the use of collimated beams of fast electrons incident on ground state atoms 9 Inelastic scattering processes can use the electron kinetic energy to increase the atoms internal energy exciting to a broad range of different states including many high lying Rydberg states e A A e displaystyle e A rightarrow A e nbsp Because the electron can retain any arbitrary amount of its initial kinetic energy this process results in a population with a broad spread of different energies Charge exchange excitation edit Another mainstay of early Rydberg atom experiments relied on charge exchange between a beam of ions and a population of neutral atoms of another species resulting in the formation of a beam of highly excited atoms 10 A B A B displaystyle A B rightarrow A B nbsp Again because the kinetic energy of the interaction can contribute to the final internal energies of the constituents this technique populates a broad range of energy levels Optical excitation edit The arrival of tunable dye lasers in the 1970s allowed a much greater level of control over populations of excited atoms In optical excitation the incident photon is absorbed by the target atom resulting in a precise final state energy The problem of producing single state mono energetic populations of Rydberg atoms thus becomes the somewhat simpler problem of precisely controlling the frequency of the laser output A g A displaystyle A gamma rightarrow A nbsp This form of direct optical excitation is generally limited to experiments with the alkali metals because the ground state binding energy in other species is generally too high to be accessible with most laser systems For atoms with a large valence electron binding energy equivalent to a large first ionization energy the excited states of the Rydberg series are inaccessible with conventional laser systems Initial collisional excitation can make up the energy shortfall allowing optical excitation to be used to select the final state Although the initial step excites to a broad range of intermediate states the precision inherent in the optical excitation process means that the laser light only interacts with a specific subset of atoms in a particular state exciting to the chosen final state Hydrogenic potential editMain article Hydrogen atom nbsp Figure 3 A comparison of the potential in a hydrogen atom with that in a Rydberg state of a different atom A large core polarizability has been used in order to make the effect clear The black curve is the Coulombic 1 r potential of the hydrogen atom while the dashed red curve includes the 1 r4 term due to polarization of the ion core An atom in a Rydberg state has a valence electron in a large orbit far from the ion core in such an orbit the outermost electron feels an almost hydrogenic Coulomb potential UC from a compact ion core consisting of a nucleus with Z protons and the lower electron shells filled with Z 1 electrons An electron in the spherically symmetric Coulomb potential has potential energy UC e24pe0r displaystyle U text C dfrac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 r nbsp The similarity of the effective potential seen by the outer electron to the hydrogen potential is a defining characteristic of Rydberg states and explains why the electron wavefunctions approximate to classical orbits in the limit of the correspondence principle 11 In other words the electron s orbit resembles the orbit of planets inside a solar system similar to what was seen in the obsolete but visually useful Bohr and Rutherford models of the atom There are three notable exceptions that can be characterized by the additional term added to the potential energy An atom may have two or more electrons in highly excited states with comparable orbital radii In this case the electron electron interaction gives rise to a significant deviation from the hydrogen potential 12 For an atom in a multiple Rydberg state the additional term Uee includes a summation of each pair of highly excited electrons Uee e24pe0 i lt j1 ri rj displaystyle U ee dfrac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 sum i lt j dfrac 1 mathbf r i mathbf r j nbsp If the valence electron has very low angular momentum interpreted classically as an extremely eccentric elliptical orbit then it may pass close enough to polarise the ion core giving rise to a 1 r4 core polarization term in the potential 13 The interaction between an induced dipole and the charge that produces it is always attractive so this contribution is always negative Upol e2ad 4pe0 2r4 displaystyle U text pol dfrac e 2 alpha text d 4 pi varepsilon 0 2 r 4 nbsp where ad is the dipole polarizability Figure 3 shows how the polarization term modifies the potential close to the nucleus If the outer electron penetrates the inner electron shells it will see more of the charge of the nucleus and hence experience a greater force In general the modification to the potential energy is not simple to calculate and must be based on knowledge of the geometry of the ion core 14 Quantum mechanical details edit nbsp Figure 4 Semiclassical orbits for n 5 with all allowed values of orbital angular momentum The black spot denotes the position of the atomic nucleus Quantum mechanically a state with abnormally high n refers to an atom in which the valence electron s have been excited into a formerly unpopulated electron orbital with higher energy and lower binding energy In hydrogen the binding energy is given by EB Ryn2 displaystyle E text B frac rm Ry n 2 nbsp where Ry 13 6 eV is the Rydberg constant The low binding energy at high values of n explains why Rydberg states are susceptible to ionization Additional terms in the potential energy expression for a Rydberg state on top of the hydrogenic Coulomb potential energy require the introduction of a quantum defect 5 dl into the expression for the binding energy EB Ry n dl 2 displaystyle E text B frac rm Ry n delta l 2 nbsp Electron wavefunctions edit The long lifetimes of Rydberg states with high orbital angular momentum can be explained in terms of the overlapping of wavefunctions The wavefunction of an electron in a high l state high angular momentum circular orbit has very little overlap with the wavefunctions of the inner electrons and hence remains relatively unperturbed The three exceptions to the definition of a Rydberg atom as an atom with a hydrogenic potential have an alternative quantum mechanical description that can be characterized by the additional term s in the atomic Hamiltonian If a second electron is excited into a state ni energetically close to the state of the outer electron no then its wavefunction becomes almost as large as the first a double Rydberg state This occurs as ni approaches no and leads to a condition where the size of the two electron s orbits are related 12 a condition sometimes referred to as radial correlation 1 An electron electron repulsion term must be included in the atomic Hamiltonian Polarization of the ion core produces an anisotropic potential that causes an angular correlation between the motions of the two outermost electrons 1 15 This can be thought of as a tidal locking effect due to a non spherically symmetric potential A core polarization term must be included in the atomic Hamiltonian The wavefunction of the outer electron in states with low orbital angular momentum l is periodically localised within the shells of inner electrons and interacts with the full charge of the nucleus 14 Figure 4 shows a semi classical interpretation of angular momentum states in an electron orbital illustrating that low l states pass closer to the nucleus potentially penetrating the ion core A core penetration term must be added to the atomic Hamiltonian In external fields edit nbsp Figure 5 Computed energy level spectra of hydrogen in an electric field near n 15 16 The potential energy found in the electronic Hamiltonian for hydrogen is the 1 r Coulomb potential there is no quantum defect which does not couple the different Stark states Consequently the energy levels from adjacent n manifolds cross at the Inglis Teller limit nbsp Figure 6 Computed energy level spectra of lithium in an electric field near n 15 16 The presence of an ion core that can be polarized and penetrated by the Rydberg electron adds additional terms to the electronic Hamiltonian resulting in a finite quantum defect leading to coupling of the different Stark states and hence avoided crossings of the energy levels The large separation between the electron and ion core in a Rydberg atom makes possible an extremely large electric dipole moment d There is an energy associated with the presence of an electric dipole in an electric field F known in atomic physics as a Stark shift ES d F displaystyle E text S mathbf d cdot mathbf F nbsp Depending on the sign of the projection of the dipole moment onto the local electric field vector a state may have energy that increases or decreases with field strength low field and high field seeking states respectively The narrow spacing between adjacent n levels in the Rydberg series means that states can approach degeneracy even for relatively modest field strengths The theoretical field strength at which a crossing would occur assuming no coupling between the states is given by the Inglis Teller limit 17 FIT e12pe0a02n5 displaystyle F text IT dfrac e 12 pi varepsilon 0 a 0 2 n 5 nbsp In the hydrogen atom the pure 1 r Coulomb potential does not couple Stark states from adjacent n manifolds resulting in real crossings as shown in figure 5 The presence of additional terms in the potential energy can lead to coupling resulting in avoided crossings as shown for lithium in figure 6 Applications and further research editPrecision measurements of trapped Rydberg atoms edit The radiative decay lifetimes of atoms in metastable states to the ground state are important to understanding astrophysics observations and tests of the standard model 18 Investigating diamagnetic effects edit The large sizes and low binding energies of Rydberg atoms lead to a high magnetic susceptibility x displaystyle chi nbsp As diamagnetic effects scale with the area of the orbit and the area is proportional to the radius squared A n4 effects impossible to detect in ground state atoms become obvious in Rydberg atoms which demonstrate very large diamagnetic shifts 19 Rydberg atoms exhibit strong electric dipole coupling of the atoms to electromagnetic fields and has been used to detect radio communications 20 21 In plasmas edit Rydberg atoms form commonly in plasmas due to the recombination of electrons and positive ions low energy recombination results in fairly stable Rydberg atoms while recombination of electrons and positive ions with high kinetic energy often form autoionising Rydberg states Rydberg atoms large sizes and susceptibility to perturbation and ionisation by electric and magnetic fields are an important factor determining the properties of plasmas 22 Condensation of Rydberg atoms forms Rydberg matter most often observed in form of long lived clusters The de excitation is significantly impeded in Rydberg matter by exchange correlation effects in the non uniform electron liquid formed on condensation by the collective valence electrons which causes extended lifetime of clusters 23 In astrophysics Radio recombination lines edit Rydberg atoms occur in space due to the dynamic equilibrium between photoionization by hot stars and recombination with electrons which at these very low densities usually proceeds via the electron re joining the atom in a very high n state and then gradually dropping through the energy levels to the ground state giving rise to a sequence of recombination spectral lines spread across the electromagnetic spectrum The very small differences in energy between Rydberg states differing in n by one or a few means that photons emitted in transitions between such states have low frequencies and long wavelengths even up to radio waves The first detection of such a radio recombination line RRL was by Soviet radio astronomers in 1964 the line designated H90a was emitted by hydrogen atoms in the n 90 state 24 Today Rydberg atoms of hydrogen helium and carbon in space are routinely observed via RRLs the brightest of which are the Hna lines corresponding to transitions from n 1 to n Weaker lines Hnb and Hng with Dn 2 and 3 are also observed Corresponding lines for helium and carbon are Hena Cna and so on 25 The discovery of lines with n gt 100 was surprising as even in the very low densities of interstellar space many orders of magnitude lower than the best laboratory vacuums attainable on Earth it had been expected that such highly excited atoms would be frequently destroyed by collisions rendering the lines unobservable Improved theoretical analysis showed that this effect had been overestimated although collisional broadening does eventually limit detectability of the lines at very high n 25 The record wavelength for hydrogen is l 73 cm for H253a implying atomic diameters of a few microns and for carbon l 18 metres from C732a 26 from atoms with a diameter of 57 micron RRLs from hydrogen and helium are produced in highly ionized regions H II regions and the Warm Ionised Medium Carbon has a lower ionization energy than hydrogen and so singly ionized carbon atoms and the corresponding recombining Rydberg states exist further from the ionizing stars in so called C II regions which form thick shells around H II regions The larger volume partially compensates for the low abundance of C compared to H making the carbon RRLs detectable In the absence of collisional broadening the wavelengths of RRLs are modified only by the Doppler effect so the measured wavelength l displaystyle lambda nbsp is usually converted to radial velocity v c l l0 l0 displaystyle v approx c lambda lambda 0 lambda 0 nbsp where l0 displaystyle lambda 0 nbsp is the rest frame wavelength H II regions in our Galaxy can have radial velocities up to 150 km s due to their motion relative to Earth as both orbit the centre of the Galaxy 27 These motions are regular enough that v displaystyle v nbsp can be used to estimate the position of the H II region on the line of sight and so its 3D position in the Galaxy Because all astrophysical Rydberg atoms are hydrogenic the frequencies of transitions for H He and C are given by the same formula except for the slightly different reduced mass of the valence electron for each element This gives helium and carbon lines apparent Doppler shifts of 100 and 140 km s respectively relative to the corresponding hydrogen line RRLs are used to detect ionized gas in distant regions of our Galaxy and also in external galaxies because the radio photons are not absorbed by interstellar dust which blocks photons from the more familiar optical transitions 28 They are also used to measure the temperature of the ionized gas via the ratio of line intensity to the continuum bremsstrahlung emission from the plasma 25 Since the temperature of H II regions is regulated by line emission from heavier elements such as C N and O recombination lines also indirectly measure their abundance metallicity 29 RRLs are spread across the radio spectrum with relatively small intervals in wavelength between them so they frequently occur in radio spectral observations primarily targeted at other spectral lines For instance H166a H167a and H168a are very close in wavelength to the 21 cm line from neutral hydrogen This allows radio astronomers to study both the neutral and the ionized interstellar medium from the same set of observations 30 Since RRLs are numerous and weak common practice is to average the velocity spectra of several neighbouring lines to improve sensitivity There are a variety of other potential applications of Rydberg atoms in cosmology and astrophysics 31 Strongly interacting systems edit Due to their large size Rydberg atoms can exhibit very large electric dipole moments Calculations using perturbation theory show that this results in strong interactions between two close Rydberg atoms Coherent control of these interactions combined with their relatively long lifetime makes them a suitable candidate to realize a quantum computer 32 In 2010 two qubit gates were achieved experimentally 33 34 Strongly interacting Rydberg atoms also feature quantum critical behavior which makes them interesting to study on their own 35 Current research directions edit Since 2000 s Rydberg atoms research encompasses broadly five directions sensing quantum optics 36 37 38 39 40 41 quantum computation 42 43 44 45 quantum simulation 46 2 47 48 and quantum matters 49 50 High electric dipole moments between Rydberg atomic states are used for radio frequency and terahertz sensing and imaging 51 52 including non demolition measurements of individual microwave photons 53 Electromagnetically induced transparency was used in combination with strong interactions between two atoms excited in Rydberg state to provide medium that exhibits strongly nonlinear behaviour at the level of individual optical photons 54 55 The tuneable interaction between Rydberg states enabled also first quantum simulation experiments 56 57 In October 2018 the United States Army Research Laboratory publicly discussed efforts to develop a super wideband radio receiver using Rydberg atoms 58 In March 2020 the laboratory announced that its scientists analysed the Rydberg sensor s sensitivity to oscillating electric fields over an enormous range of frequencies from 0 to 1012 Hertz the spectrum to 0 3mm wavelength The Rydberg sensor can reliably detect signals over the entire spectrum and compare favourably with other established electric field sensor technologies such as electro optic crystals and dipole antenna coupled passive electronics 59 60 Classical simulation edit nbsp Figure 7 Stark Coulomb potential for a Rydberg atom in a static electric field An electron in such a potential feels a torque that can change its angular momentum nbsp Figure 8 Trajectory of the electron in a hydrogen atom in an electric field E 3 x 106 V m in the x direction Note that classically all values of angular momentum are allowed figure 4 shows the particular orbits associated with quantum mechanically allowed values See the animation A simple 1 r potential results in a closed Keplerian elliptical orbit In the presence of an external electric field Rydberg atoms can obtain very large electric dipole moments making them extremely susceptible to perturbation by the field Figure 7 shows how application of an external electric field known in atomic physics as a Stark field changes the geometry of the potential dramatically changing the behaviour of the electron A Coulombic potential does not apply any torque as the force is always antiparallel to the position vector always pointing along a line running between the electron and the nucleus t r F r F sin 8 displaystyle mathbf tau mathbf r times mathbf F mathbf r mathbf F sin theta nbsp 8 p t 0 displaystyle theta pi Rightarrow mathbf tau 0 nbsp With the application of a static electric field the electron feels a continuously changing torque The resulting trajectory becomes progressively more distorted over time eventually going through the full range of angular momentum from L LMAX to a straight line L 0 to the initial orbit in the opposite sense L LMAX 61 The time period of the oscillation in angular momentum the time to complete the trajectory in figure 8 almost exactly matches the quantum mechanically predicted period for the wavefunction to return to its initial state demonstrating the classical nature of the Rydberg atom See also editHeavy Rydberg system Old quantum theory Quantum chaos Rydberg molecule Rydberg polaronReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rydberg atoms a b c Gallagher Thomas F 1994 Rydberg Atoms Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 02166 1 a b Sibalic Nikola S Adams Charles 2018 Rydberg Physics IOP Publishing Bibcode 2018ryph book S doi 10 1088 978 0 7503 1635 4 ISBN 9780750316354 Metcalf Research Group 2004 11 08 Rydberg Atom Optics Stony Brook University Archived from the original on August 26 2005 Retrieved 2008 07 30 J Murray Krezan 2008 The classical dynamics of Rydberg Stark atoms in momentum space American Journal of Physics 76 11 1007 1011 Bibcode 2008AmJPh 76 1007M doi 10 1119 1 2961081 a b Nolan James 2005 05 31 Rydberg Atoms and the Quantum Defect Davidson College Archived from the original on 2015 12 06 Retrieved 2008 07 30 I Martinson et al 2005 Janne Rydberg his life and work Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B 235 1 4 17 22 Bibcode 2005NIMPB 235 17M doi 10 1016 j nimb 2005 03 137 The Bohr Model University of Tennessee Knoxville 2000 08 10 Retrieved 2009 11 25 Niels Bohr 1922 12 11 The Structure of the Atom PDF Nobel Lecture Retrieved 2018 11 16 J Olmsted 1967 Excitation of nitrogen triplet states by electron impact Radiation Research 31 2 191 200 Bibcode 1967RadR 31 191O doi 10 2307 3572319 JSTOR 3572319 PMID 6025857 M Haugh et al 1966 Electronic excitation accompanying charge exchange Journal of Chemical Physics 44 2 837 839 Bibcode 1966JChPh 44 837H doi 10 1063 1 1726773 T P Hezel et al 1992 Classical view of the properties of Rydberg atoms Application of the correspondence principle American Journal of Physics 60 4 329 335 Bibcode 1992AmJPh 60 329H doi 10 1119 1 16876 a b I K Dmitrieva et al 1993 Energies of Doubly Excited States The Double Rydberg Formula Journal of Applied Spectroscopy 59 1 2 466 470 Bibcode 1993JApSp 59 466D doi 10 1007 BF00663353 S2CID 96628309 L Neale et al 1995 Core Polarization in Kr VIII Physical Review A 51 5 4272 4275 Bibcode 1995PhRvA 51 4272N doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 51 4272 PMID 9912104 a b C E Theodosiou 1983 Evaluation of penetration effects in high l Rydberg states Physical Review A 28 5 3098 3101 Bibcode 1983PhRvA 28 3098T doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 28 3098 T A Heim et al 1995 Excitation of high lying pair Rydberg states Journal of Physics B 28 24 5309 5315 Bibcode 1995JPhB 28 5309H doi 10 1088 0953 4075 28 24 015 S2CID 250862926 a b M Courtney et al 1995 Classical semiclassical and quantum dynamics of lithium in an electric field Physical Review A 51 5 3604 3620 Bibcode 1995PhRvA 51 3604C doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 51 3604 PMID 9912027 D R Inglis et al 1939 Ionic Depression of Series Limits in One Electron Spectra Astrophysical Journal 90 439 Bibcode 1939ApJ 90 439I doi 10 1086 144118 Nicholas D Guise et al Apr 24 2014 Measurement of the Kr xviii 3d 2D5 2 lifetime at low energy in a unitary Penning trap Physical Review A 89 4 040502 arXiv 1404 6181 Bibcode 2014PhRvA 89d0502G doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 89 040502 S2CID 54090132 J Neukammer et al 1984 Diamagnetic shift and singlet triplet mixing of 6snp Yb Rydberg states with large radial extent Physical Review A 30 2 1142 1144 Bibcode 1984PhRvA 30 1142N doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 30 1142 Anderson David A et al 2021 An Atomic Receiver for AM and FM Radio Communication IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 69 5 2455 2462 arXiv 1808 08589 Bibcode 2021ITAP 69 2455A doi 10 1109 TAP 2020 2987112 S2CID 118828101 Oullette Jennifer 19 September 2018 A new antenna using single atoms could usher in the age of atomic radio Ars Technica Retrieved 19 September 2018 G Vitrant et al 1982 Rydberg to plasma evolution in a dense gas of very excited atoms Journal of Physics B 15 2 L49 L55 Bibcode 1982JPhB 15L 49V doi 10 1088 0022 3700 15 2 004 E A Manykin et al 2006 Rydberg matter properties and decay Proceedings of the SPIE SPIE Proceedings 6181 5 618105 618105 9 Bibcode 2006SPIE 6181E 05M doi 10 1117 12 675004 S2CID 96732651 Sorochenko R L Borodzich E V 1965 Detection of a Radio Line Due to Excited Hydrogen in the Nebula NGC 6618 Omega Soviet Physics Doklady 10 588 Bibcode 1966SPhD 10 588S a b c Gordon M A Sorochenko R L 2009 Radio Recombination Lines Astrophysics and Space Science Library 282 doi 10 1007 978 0 387 09691 9 ISBN 978 0 387 09604 9 ISSN 0067 0057 Konovalenko A A 1984 Observations of carbon recombination lines at decametric wavelengths in the direction of Cassiopeia Pisma V Astronomicheskii Zhurnal Soviet Astronomy Letters 10 353 356 Bibcode 1984PAZh 10 846K Wenger Trey V Dawson J R Dickey John M Jordan C H McClure Griffiths N M Anderson L D Armentrout W P Balser Dana S Bania T M 2021 06 01 The Southern H II Region Discovery Survey II The Full Catalog The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 254 2 36 arXiv 2103 12199 Bibcode 2021ApJS 254 36W doi 10 3847 1538 4365 abf4d4 hdl 1885 287773 ISSN 0067 0049 Anderson L D Luisi Matteo Liu Bin Wenger Trey V Balser Dana S Bania T M Haffner L M Linville Dylan J Mascoop J L 2021 06 01 The GBT Diffuse Ionized Gas Survey GDIGS Survey Overview and First Data Release The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 254 2 28 arXiv 2103 10466 Bibcode 2021ApJS 254 28A doi 10 3847 1538 4365 abef65 ISSN 0067 0049 Wenger Trey V Balser Dana S Anderson L D Bania T M 2019 12 16 Metallicity Structure in the Milky Way Disk Revealed by Galactic H ii Regions The Astrophysical Journal 887 2 114 arXiv 1910 14605 Bibcode 2019ApJ 887 114W doi 10 3847 1538 4357 ab53d3 ISSN 1538 4357 Alves Marta I R Calabretta Mark Davies Rodney D Dickinson Clive Staveley Smith Lister Davis Richard J Chen Tianyue Barr Adam 2015 06 21 The HIPASS survey of the Galactic plane in radio recombination lines Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 450 2 2025 2042 arXiv 1411 4497 doi 10 1093 mnras stv751 ISSN 1365 2966 Y N Gnedin et al 2009 Rydberg atoms in astrophysics New Astronomy Reviews 53 7 10 259 265 arXiv 1208 2516 Bibcode 2009NewAR 53 259G doi 10 1016 j newar 2009 07 003 S2CID 119276100 D Jaksch et al 2000 Fast Quantum Gates for Neutral Atoms Physical Review Letters 85 10 2208 11 arXiv quant ph 0004038 Bibcode 2000PhRvL 85 2208J doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 85 2208 PMID 10970499 S2CID 16713798 T Wilk et al 2010 Entanglement of Two Individual Neutral Atoms Using Rydberg Blockade Physical Review Letters 104 1 010502 arXiv 0908 0454 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104a0502W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 010502 PMID 20366354 S2CID 16384272 L Isenhower et al 2010 Demonstration of a Neutral Atom Controlled NOT Quantum Gate Physical Review Letters 104 1 010503 arXiv 0907 5552 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104a0503I doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 010503 PMID 20366355 S2CID 2091127 H Weimer et al 2008 Quantum Critical Behavior in Strongly Interacting Rydberg Gases Physical Review Letters 101 25 250601 arXiv 0806 3754 Bibcode 2008PhRvL 101y0601W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 101 250601 PMID 19113686 S2CID 28636728 Tiarks Daniel Schmidt Eberle Steffen Stolz Thomas Rempe Gerhard Durr Stephan February 2019 A photon photon quantum gate based on Rydberg interactions Nature Physics 15 2 124 126 arXiv 1807 05795 doi 10 1038 s41567 018 0313 7 ISSN 1745 2473 S2CID 54072181 Khazali Mohammadsadegh Murray Callum R Pohl Thomas 2019 09 13 Polariton Exchange Interactions in Multichannel Optical Networks Physical Review Letters 123 11 113605 arXiv 1903 12442 Bibcode 2019PhRvL 123k3605K doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 123 113605 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 31573258 S2CID 202577976 Gorshkov Alexey V Otterbach Johannes Fleischhauer Michael Pohl Thomas Lukin Mikhail D 2011 09 22 Photon Photon Interactions via Rydberg Blockade Physical Review Letters 107 13 133602 arXiv 1103 3700 Bibcode 2011PhRvL 107m3602G doi 10 1103 physrevlett 107 133602 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 22026852 S2CID 11681713 Khazali Mohammadsadegh Heshami Khabat Simon Christoph 2015 03 17 Photon photon gate via the interaction between two collective Rydberg excitations Physical Review A 91 3 030301 arXiv 1407 7510 Bibcode 2015PhRvA 91c0301K doi 10 1103 physreva 91 030301 ISSN 1050 2947 S2CID 118859994 Friedler Inbal Petrosyan David Fleischhauer Michael Kurizki Gershon 2005 10 05 Long range interactions and entanglement of slow single photon pulses Physical Review A 72 4 043803 arXiv quant ph 0503071 Bibcode 2005PhRvA 72d3803F doi 10 1103 physreva 72 043803 ISSN 1050 2947 S2CID 30993913 Paredes Barato D Adams C S 2014 01 28 All Optical Quantum Information Processing Using Rydberg Gates Physical Review Letters 112 4 040501 arXiv 1309 7933 Bibcode 2014PhRvL 112d0501P doi 10 1103 physrevlett 112 040501 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 24580425 S2CID 19020862 Lukin M D Fleischhauer M Cote R Duan L M Jaksch D Cirac J I Zoller P 2001 06 26 Dipole Blockade and Quantum Information Processing in Mesoscopic Atomic Ensembles Physical Review Letters 87 3 037901 arXiv quant ph 0011028 Bibcode 2001PhRvL 87c7901L doi 10 1103 physrevlett 87 037901 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 11461592 S2CID 13452668 Jaksch D Cirac J I Zoller P Rolston S L Cote R Lukin M D 2000 09 04 Fast Quantum Gates for Neutral Atoms Physical Review Letters 85 10 2208 2211 arXiv quant ph 0004038 Bibcode 2000PhRvL 85 2208J doi 10 1103 physrevlett 85 2208 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 10970499 S2CID 16713798 Saffman M Walker T G Molmer K 2010 08 18 Quantum information with Rydberg atoms Reviews of Modern Physics 82 3 2313 2363 arXiv 0909 4777 Bibcode 2010RvMP 82 2313S doi 10 1103 revmodphys 82 2313 ISSN 0034 6861 S2CID 14285764 Khazali Mohammadsadegh Molmer Klaus 2020 06 11 Fast Multiqubit Gates by Adiabatic Evolution in Interacting Excited State Manifolds of Rydberg Atoms and Superconducting Circuits Physical Review X 10 2 021054 arXiv 2006 07035 Bibcode 2020PhRvX 10b1054K doi 10 1103 physrevx 10 021054 ISSN 2160 3308 Weimer Hendrik Muller Markus Lesanovsky Igor Zoller Peter Buchler Hans Peter 2010 03 14 A Rydberg quantum simulator Nature Physics 6 5 382 388 arXiv 0907 1657 Bibcode 2010NatPh 6 382W doi 10 1038 nphys1614 ISSN 1745 2473 S2CID 54710282 Khazali Mohammadsadegh 2022 03 03 Discrete Time Quantum Walk amp Floquet Topological Insulators via Distance Selective Rydberg Interaction Quantum 6 664 arXiv 2101 11412 Bibcode 2022Quant 6 664K doi 10 22331 q 2022 03 03 664 S2CID 246635019 Dauphin A Muller M Martin Delgado M A 2012 11 20 Rydberg atom quantum simulation and Chern number characterization of a topological Mott insulator Physical Review A 86 5 053618 arXiv 1207 6373 Bibcode 2012PhRvA 86e3618D doi 10 1103 physreva 86 053618 ISSN 1050 2947 S2CID 55200016 Khazali Mohammadsadegh 2021 08 05 Rydberg noisy dressing and applications in making soliton molecules and droplet quasicrystals Physical Review Research 3 3 L032033 arXiv 2007 01039 Bibcode 2021PhRvR 3c2033K doi 10 1103 PhysRevResearch 3 L032033 ISSN 2643 1564 S2CID 220301701 Henkel N Cinti F Jain P Pupillo G Pohl T 2012 06 26 Supersolid Vortex Crystals in Rydberg Dressed Bose Einstein Condensates Physical Review Letters 108 26 265301 arXiv 1111 5761 Bibcode 2012PhRvL 108z5301H doi 10 1103 physrevlett 108 265301 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 23004994 S2CID 1782501 Sedlacek Jonathon A Schwettmann Arne Kubler Harald Low Robert Pfau Tilman Shaffer James P 2012 09 16 Microwave electrometry with Rydberg atoms in a vapour cell using bright atomic resonances Nature Physics 8 11 819 824 Bibcode 2012NatPh 8 819S doi 10 1038 nphys2423 ISSN 1745 2473 S2CID 121120666 Wade C G Sibalic N de Melo N R Kondo J M Adams C S Weatherill K J 2016 11 07 Real time near field terahertz imaging with atomic optical fluorescence Nature Photonics 11 1 40 43 arXiv 1603 07107 doi 10 1038 nphoton 2016 214 ISSN 1749 4885 S2CID 119212524 Nogues G Rauschenbeutel A Osnaghi S Brune M Raimond J M Haroche S 1999 Seeing a single photon without destroying it Nature 400 6741 239 242 Bibcode 1999Natur 400 239N doi 10 1038 22275 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4367650 Pritchard J D Maxwell D Gauguet A Weatherill K J Jones M P A Adams C S 2010 11 05 Cooperative Atom Light Interaction in a Blockaded Rydberg Ensemble Physical Review Letters 105 19 193603 arXiv 0911 3523 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 105s3603P doi 10 1103 physrevlett 105 193603 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 21231168 S2CID 12217031 Firstenberg Ofer Peyronel Thibault Liang Qi Yu Gorshkov Alexey V Lukin Mikhail D Vuletic Vladan 2013 09 25 Attractive photons in a quantum nonlinear medium PDF Nature 502 7469 71 75 Bibcode 2013Natur 502 71F doi 10 1038 nature12512 hdl 1721 1 91605 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 24067613 S2CID 1699899 Schauss P Zeiher J Fukuhara T Hild S Cheneau M Macri T Pohl T Bloch I Gross C 2015 03 27 Crystallization in Ising quantum magnets Science 347 6229 1455 1458 arXiv 1404 0980 Bibcode 2015Sci 347 1455S doi 10 1126 science 1258351 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 25814579 S2CID 28102735 Labuhn Henning Barredo Daniel Ravets Sylvain de Leseleuc Sylvain Macri Tommaso Lahaye Thierry Browaeys Antoine 2016 Tunable two dimensional arrays of single Rydberg atoms for realizing quantum Ising models Nature 534 7609 667 670 arXiv 1509 04543 Bibcode 2016Natur 534 667L doi 10 1038 nature18274 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 27281203 S2CID 4461633 Army researchers make giant leap in quantum sensing United States Army Research Laboratory 2018 10 25 Scientists create quantum sensor that covers entire radio frequency spectrum Phys org United States Army Research Laboratory 2020 03 19 Meyer David H Kunz Paul D Cox Kevin C 2021 Waveguide Coupled Rydberg Spectrum Analyzer from 0 to 20 GHz Physical Review Applied 15 1 014053 arXiv 2009 14383 Bibcode 2021PhRvP 15a4053M doi 10 1103 PhysRevApplied 15 014053 S2CID 222067191 T P Hezel et al 1992 Classical view of the Stark effect in hydrogen atoms American Journal of Physics 60 4 324 328 Bibcode 1992AmJPh 60 324H doi 10 1119 1 16875 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rydberg atom amp oldid 1217411644, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.