We investigated the dynamics of a series of room temperature ionic liquids based on the same 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium (BMIM) cation and different anions by means of broadband dielectric spectroscopy covering 15 decades in frequency, and in the temperature range from 400 K down to 10 K. A dc conductivity is observed in these systems above Tg with a typical ionic conductor behavior. Below, two relaxation processes appear, with the same characteristics as the secondary relaxations typically observed in glasses. The activation energy of the secondary processes and their dependence on the anion are different. The fast relaxation process is attributed to conformational changes in the butyl group of the BMIM cation and the slower process shows the characteristics of a genuine JG relaxation.The glass transition involves a dramatic slowing down of the structural relaxation in supercooled liquids from the ps time scale towards diverging times which ultimately brings the liquid into the glassy state. The only technique that can follow the evolution of the dynamics of the system in this huge time scale window is dielectric spectroscopy, and studies covering the full dynamic range (over 15 decades) of some paradigmatic glass formers are available [1][2][3]. Dielectric relaxation showed that secondary relaxations appear at frequencies higher than the main relaxation process, the importance of these processes being already pointed out more than three decades ago by Johary and Goldstein (JG) [4]. They proposed that these processes appear as a consequence of the glassy state, and they demonstrated that one type of process, commonly termed now "JG β relaxation", occurs in liquids of simple rigid molecules and does not involve intramolecular motion. The fundamental origin of secondary relaxations in supercooled liquids is a matter of current attention and dispute, with much effort being devoted to clarifying its true nature [5][6][7][8].Secondary relaxations have been studied in many systems, but the search of these processes in new types of materials should help to obtain a better understanding of their origin. A particular insight was obtained recently with binary systems, showing a continuous transformation between a high frequency wing and a JG relaxation when the composition of the mixture is changed [9]. Ionic systems, formed by anions and cations have been studied to a very low extent. The most common ionic materials are salts, like the NaCl, which have usually melting temperatures around 800• C. An exception is calcium potassium nitrate Ca 0.4 K 0.6 (NO 3 ) 1.4 (CKN), with a rather low T g at 333 K [10,11]. This so called molten salt was shown to exhibit a secondary mechanical relaxation, but it was never clearly observed in dielectric spectroscopy [4,12]. So the existence of the secondary relaxations in systems with free charges, and in particular, in purely ionic systems is an open question.A new class of chemicals has been discovered in the last decades, the room temperature ionic liquids (RTIL). They are molten salt...