“…The study of quantum impurities has become an important branch of ultra-cold atomic physics, allowing explorations of condensed matter phenomena ranging from the Kondo effect [1,2] over polaron formation [3,4,5,6,7] to the Anderson orthogonality catastrophe [8]. A unique impurity object in this context is a Rydberg atom in a Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) [9,10,11,12,13,14]. Due to the extreme radius of the Rydberg electron density distribution r orb ≈ 2a 0 n 2 , which can reach r orb ≈ 1.8µm at n = 133, one can enter the realm where tens of thousands of ground-state atoms are located inside the Rydberg orbit and can be set into motion by collisions with the Rydberg electron during the life-time of the latter.…”