Observing collisions beyond the secular approximation limit.
Junyang MaHaisu ZhangBruno LavorelFranck BillardEdouard HertzJian WuChristian BouletJean-Michel HartmannOlivier FaucherPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Quantum coherence plays an essential role in diverse natural phenomena and technological applications. The unavoidable coupling of the quantum system to an uncontrolled environment incurs dissipation that is often described using the secular approximation. Here we probe the limit of this approximation in the rotational relaxation of molecules due to thermal collisions by using the laser-kicked molecular rotor as a model system. Specifically, rotational coherences in N2O gas (diluted in He) are created by two successive nonresonant short and intense laser pulses and probed by studying the change of amplitude of the rotational alignment echo with the gas density. By interrogating the system at the early stage of its collisional relaxation, we observe a significant variation of the dissipative influence of collisions with the time of appearance of the echo, featuring a decoherence process that is well reproduced by the nonsecular quantum master equation for modeling molecular collisions.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- early stage
- room temperature
- single molecule
- magnetic resonance
- energy transfer
- diffusion weighted imaging
- diffusion weighted
- monte carlo
- living cells
- quantum dots
- carbon dioxide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- magnetic resonance imaging
- radiation therapy
- high resolution
- computed tomography
- ionic liquid
- lymph node