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Effects of PES Uncertainty on Collision Observables: Comprehensive Analysis of Quantum Diffraction Universality

POSTER

Abstract

Quantum diffractive collisions between an impinging ambient gas and stationary sensor particles in a vacuum magneto-optical trap follow a universal law, which allows one to bypass time-intensive scattering calculations and use the setup as a self-defining gas pressure sensor. This was validated earlier for two systems of collision partners Rb+N2 and Rb+Rb. We show that deviations from universality can be expected for systems with a small reduced mass and a small C6 coefficient in the interaction potential energy surface (PES). We describe how the coupled-channel quantum scattering calculations for Li+H2 and Rb+H2 are essential to concluding that Rb+H2 does not follow universality. Additionally, a key feature of universality is the insensitivity of collision observables to changes in the short-range potential. We illustrate how the scattering rate changes in response to variation of the short-range PES for a universal (Rb+N2) and non-universal (Rb+H2) system. By analyzing the trends in these systems, we aim to employ scattering rate sensitivity to the underlying PES as a quantitative measure of universality.

Publication: Shen, P.; Frieling E.; Herperger, K. R.; Uhland, D.; Stewart, R. A.; Deshmukh, A.; Krems, R. V.; Booth, J. L.; Madison, K. W. Cross-calibration of atomic pressure sensors and deviation from quantum diffractive collision universality for light particles. Submitted for peer-review, 2022. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2209.02900

Presenters

  • Katherine R Herperger

    University of British Columbia

Authors

  • Katherine R Herperger

    University of British Columbia

  • Pinrui Shen

    University of British Columbia

  • Erik B Frieling

    University of British Columbia

  • Denis Uhland

    University of British Columbia

  • Riley A Stewart

    University of British Columbia

  • Avinash Deshmukh

    University of British Columbia

  • Roman V Krems

    University of British Columbia

  • James L Booth

    British Columbia Inst of Tech

  • Kirk W Madison

    University of British Columbia