“…The subsequent introduction of time-dependent electric fields [34] by Vliegen, Merkt, and coworkers permitted efficient control over the translational motion of hydrogenic [35] and nonhydrogenic [36] atoms in pulsed supersonic beams and the realization of a wide range of Rydberg atom and molecule optics elements, including mirrors [37], lenses [35], deflectors [38,39], decelerators, and traps based upon three-dimensional [40][41][42] and chip-based two-dimensional [43][44][45] electrode structures. These advances have allowed studies of the effects of blackbody-induced transitions and photoionization of Rydberg states [42,46], studies of m-changing dipole-dipole interactions in gases of polar Rydberg atoms and their effects on Rydberg state lifetimes [47], the preparation of long-lived high-|m| (i.e., |m| 3) Rydberg states of H 2 [48,49], and new methods to study ion-molecule reactions at low temperatures [50,51]. It is only recently, however, that these methods have been applied to the Ps system [52].…”