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Bose–Einstein condensate

In condensed matter physics, a Bose–Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter that is typically formed when a gas of bosons at very low densities is cooled to temperatures very close to absolute zero (−273.15 °C or −459.67 °F). Under such conditions, a large fraction of bosons occupy the lowest quantum state, at which microscopic quantum mechanical phenomena, particularly wavefunction interference, become apparent macroscopically.

Schematic Bose–Einstein condensation versus temperature of the energy diagram

This state was first predicted, generally, in 1924–1925 by Albert Einstein,[1] crediting a pioneering paper by Satyendra Nath Bose on the new field now known as quantum statistics.[2] In 1995, the Bose–Einstein condensate was created by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman of the University of Colorado Boulder using rubidium atoms; later that year, Wolfgang Ketterle of MIT produced a BEC using sodium atoms. In 2001 Cornell, Wieman and Ketterle shared the Nobel Prize in Physics "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates."[3]

History edit

 
Velocity-distribution data (3 views) for a gas of rubidium atoms, confirming the discovery of a new phase of matter, the Bose–Einstein condensate. Left: just before the appearance of a Bose–Einstein condensate. Center: just after the appearance of the condensate. Right: after further evaporation, leaving a sample of nearly pure condensate.

Bose first sent a paper to Einstein on the quantum statistics of light quanta (now called photons), in which he derived Planck's quantum radiation law without any reference to classical physics. Einstein was impressed, translated the paper himself from English to German and submitted it for Bose to the Zeitschrift für Physik, which published it in 1924.[4] (The Einstein manuscript, once believed to be lost, was found in a library at Leiden University in 2005.[5]) Einstein then extended Bose's ideas to matter in two other papers.[6][7] The result of their efforts is the concept of a Bose gas, governed by Bose–Einstein statistics, which describes the statistical distribution of identical particles with integer spin, now called bosons. Bosons, particles that include the photon as well as atoms such as helium-4 (4
He
), are allowed to share a quantum state. Einstein proposed that cooling bosonic atoms to a very low temperature would cause them to fall (or "condense") into the lowest accessible quantum state, resulting in a new form of matter.

In 1938, Fritz London proposed the BEC as a mechanism for superfluidity in 4
He
and superconductivity.[8][9]

The quest to produce a Bose–Einstein condensate in the laboratory was stimulated by a paper published in 1976 by two Program Directors at the National Science Foundation (William Stwalley and Lewis Nosanow).[10] This led to the immediate pursuit of the idea by four independent research groups; these were led by Isaac Silvera (University of Amsterdam), Walter Hardy (University of British Columbia), Thomas Greytak (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and David Lee (Cornell University).[11]

On 5 June 1995, the first gaseous condensate was produced by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman at the University of Colorado at Boulder NISTJILA lab, in a gas of rubidium atoms cooled to 170 nanokelvins (nK).[12] Shortly thereafter, Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT produced a Bose–Einstein Condensate in a gas of sodium atoms. For their achievements Cornell, Wieman, and Ketterle received the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics.[13] These early studies founded the field of ultracold atoms, and hundreds of research groups around the world now routinely produce BECs of dilute atomic vapors in their labs.

Since 1995, many other atomic species have been condensed, and BECs have also been realized using molecules, quasi-particles, and photons.[14]

Critical temperature edit

This transition to BEC occurs below a critical temperature, which for a uniform three-dimensional gas consisting of non-interacting particles with no apparent internal degrees of freedom is given by:

 

where:

  is the critical temperature,
  the particle density,
  the mass per boson,
  the reduced Planck constant,
  the Boltzmann constant and
  the Riemann zeta function;   [15]

Interactions shift the value and the corrections can be calculated by mean-field theory. This formula is derived from finding the gas degeneracy in the Bose gas using Bose–Einstein statistics.

Derivation edit

Ideal Bose gas edit

For an ideal Bose gas we have the equation of state:

 

where   is the per particle volume,   the thermal wavelength,   the fugacity and

 

It is noticeable that   is a monotonically growing function of   in  , which are the only values for which the series converge. Recognizing that the second term on the right-hand side contains the expression for the average occupation number of the fundamental state  , the equation of state can be rewritten as

 

Because the left term on the second equation must always be positive,   and because  , a stronger condition is

 

which defines a transition between a gas phase and a condensed phase. On the critical region it is possible to define a critical temperature and thermal wavelength:

 
 

recovering the value indicated on the previous section. The critical values are such that if   or   we are in the presence of a Bose–Einstein condensate. Understanding what happens with the fraction of particles on the fundamental level is crucial. As so, write the equation of state for  , obtaining

  and equivalently  .

So, if   the fraction   and if   the fraction  . At temperatures near to absolute 0, particles tend to condensate in the fundamental state, which is the state with momentum  .

Models edit

Bose Einstein's non-interacting gas edit

Consider a collection of N non-interacting particles, which can each be in one of two quantum states,   and  . If the two states are equal in energy, each different configuration is equally likely.

If we can tell which particle is which, there are   different configurations, since each particle can be in   or   independently. In almost all of the configurations, about half the particles are in   and the other half in  . The balance is a statistical effect: the number of configurations is largest when the particles are divided equally.

If the particles are indistinguishable, however, there are only N+1 different configurations. If there are K particles in state  , there are N − K particles in state  . Whether any particular particle is in state   or in state   cannot be determined, so each value of K determines a unique quantum state for the whole system.

Suppose now that the energy of state   is slightly greater than the energy of state   by an amount E. At temperature T, a particle will have a lesser probability to be in state   by  . In the distinguishable case, the particle distribution will be biased slightly towards state  . But in the indistinguishable case, since there is no statistical pressure toward equal numbers, the most-likely outcome is that most of the particles will collapse into state  .

In the distinguishable case, for large N, the fraction in state   can be computed. It is the same as flipping a coin with probability proportional to p = exp(−E/T) to land tails.

In the indistinguishable case, each value of K is a single state, which has its own separate Boltzmann probability. So the probability distribution is exponential:

 

For large N, the normalization constant C is (1 − p). The expected total number of particles not in the lowest energy state, in the limit that  , is equal to

 

It does not grow when N is large; it just approaches a constant. This will be a negligible fraction of the total number of particles. So a collection of enough Bose particles in thermal equilibrium will mostly be in the ground state, with only a few in any excited state, no matter how small the energy difference.

Consider now a gas of particles, which can be in different momentum states labeled  . If the number of particles is less than the number of thermally accessible states, for high temperatures and low densities, the particles will all be in different states. In this limit, the gas is classical. As the density increases or the temperature decreases, the number of accessible states per particle becomes smaller, and at some point, more particles will be forced into a single state than the maximum allowed for that state by statistical weighting. From this point on, any extra particle added will go into the ground state.

To calculate the transition temperature at any density, integrate, over all momentum states, the expression for maximum number of excited particles, p/(1 − p):

 
 

When the integral (also known as Bose–Einstein integral) is evaluated with factors of   and ℏ restored by dimensional analysis, it gives the critical temperature formula of the preceding section. Therefore, this integral defines the critical temperature and particle number corresponding to the conditions of negligible chemical potential  . In Bose–Einstein statistics distribution,   is actually still nonzero for BECs; however,   is less than the ground state energy. Except when specifically talking about the ground state,   can be approximated for most energy or momentum states as  .

Bogoliubov theory for weakly interacting gas edit

Nikolay Bogoliubov considered perturbations on the limit of dilute gas,[16] finding a finite pressure at zero temperature and positive chemical potential. This leads to corrections for the ground state. The Bogoliubov state has pressure (T = 0):  .

The original interacting system can be converted to a system of non-interacting particles with a dispersion law.

Gross–Pitaevskii equation edit

In some simplest cases, the state of condensed particles can be described with a nonlinear Schrödinger equation, also known as Gross–Pitaevskii or Ginzburg–Landau equation. The validity of this approach is actually limited to the case of ultracold temperatures, which fits well for the most alkali atoms experiments.

This approach originates from the assumption that the state of the BEC can be described by the unique wavefunction of the condensate  . For a system of this nature,   is interpreted as the particle density, so the total number of atoms is  

Provided essentially all atoms are in the condensate (that is, have condensed to the ground state), and treating the bosons using mean-field theory, the energy (E) associated with the state   is:

 

Minimizing this energy with respect to infinitesimal variations in  , and holding the number of atoms constant, yields the Gross–Pitaevski equation (GPE) (also a non-linear Schrödinger equation):

 

where:

   is the mass of the bosons,
   is the external potential, and
   represents the inter-particle interactions.

In the case of zero external potential, the dispersion law of interacting Bose–Einstein-condensed particles is given by so-called Bogoliubov spectrum (for  ):

 

The Gross-Pitaevskii equation (GPE) provides a relatively good description of the behavior of atomic BEC's. However, GPE does not take into account the temperature dependence of dynamical variables, and is therefore valid only for  . It is not applicable, for example, for the condensates of excitons, magnons and photons, where the critical temperature is comparable to room temperature.

Numerical solution edit

The Gross-Pitaevskii equation is a partial differential equation in space and time variables. Usually it does not have analytic solution and different numerical methods, such as split-step Crank-Nicolson[17] and Fourier spectral[18] methods, are used for its solution. There are different Fortran and C programs for its solution for contact interaction[19][20] and long-range dipolar interaction[21] which can be freely used.

Weaknesses of Gross–Pitaevskii model edit

The Gross–Pitaevskii model of BEC is a physical approximation valid for certain classes of BECs. By construction, the GPE uses the following simplifications: it assumes that interactions between condensate particles are of the contact two-body type and also neglects anomalous contributions to self-energy.[22] These assumptions are suitable mostly for the dilute three-dimensional condensates. If one relaxes any of these assumptions, the equation for the condensate wavefunction acquires the terms containing higher-order powers of the wavefunction. Moreover, for some physical systems the amount of such terms turns out to be infinite, therefore, the equation becomes essentially non-polynomial. The examples where this could happen are the Bose–Fermi composite condensates,[23][24][25][26] effectively lower-dimensional condensates,[27] and dense condensates and superfluid clusters and droplets.[28] It is found that one has to go beyond the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. For example, the logarithmic term   found in the Logarithmic Schrödinger equation must be added to the Gross-Pitaevskii equation along with a Ginzburg-Sobyanin contribution to correctly determine that the speed of sound scales as the cubic root of pressure for Helium-4 at very low temperatures in close agreement with experiment.[29]

Other edit

However, it is clear that in a general case the behaviour of Bose–Einstein condensate can be described by coupled evolution equations for condensate density, superfluid velocity and distribution function of elementary excitations. This problem was solved in 1977 by Peletminskii et al. in microscopical approach. The Peletminskii equations are valid for any finite temperatures below the critical point. Years after, in 1985, Kirkpatrick and Dorfman obtained similar equations using another microscopical approach. The Peletminskii equations also reproduce Khalatnikov hydrodynamical equations for superfluid as a limiting case.

Superfluidity of BEC and Landau criterion edit

The phenomena of superfluidity of a Bose gas and superconductivity of a strongly-correlated Fermi gas (a gas of Cooper pairs) are tightly connected to Bose–Einstein condensation. Under corresponding conditions, below the temperature of phase transition, these phenomena were observed in helium-4 and different classes of superconductors. In this sense, the superconductivity is often called the superfluidity of Fermi gas. In the simplest form, the origin of superfluidity can be seen from the weakly interacting bosons model.

Experimental observation edit

Superfluid helium-4 edit

In 1938, Pyotr Kapitsa, John Allen and Don Misener discovered that helium-4 became a new kind of fluid, now known as a superfluid, at temperatures less than 2.17 K (the lambda point). Superfluid helium has many unusual properties, including zero viscosity (the ability to flow without dissipating energy) and the existence of quantized vortices. It was quickly believed that the superfluidity was due to partial Bose–Einstein condensation of the liquid. In fact, many properties of superfluid helium also appear in gaseous condensates created by Cornell, Wieman and Ketterle (see below). Superfluid helium-4 is a liquid rather than a gas, which means that the interactions between the atoms are relatively strong; the original theory of Bose–Einstein condensation must be heavily modified in order to describe it. Bose–Einstein condensation remains, however, fundamental to the superfluid properties of helium-4. Note that helium-3, a fermion, also enters a superfluid phase (at a much lower temperature) which can be explained by the formation of bosonic Cooper pairs of two atoms (see also fermionic condensate).

Dilute atomic gases edit

The first "pure" Bose–Einstein condensate was created by Eric Cornell, Carl Wieman, and co-workers at JILA on 5 June 1995.[12] They cooled a dilute vapor of approximately two thousand rubidium-87 atoms to below 170 nK using a combination of laser cooling (a technique that won its inventors Steven Chu, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, and William D. Phillips the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics) and magnetic evaporative cooling. About four months later, an independent effort led by Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT condensed sodium-23. Ketterle's condensate had a hundred times more atoms, allowing important results such as the observation of quantum mechanical interference between two different condensates. Cornell, Wieman and Ketterle won the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics for their achievements.[30]

A group led by Randall Hulet at Rice University announced a condensate of lithium atoms only one month following the JILA work.[31] Lithium has attractive interactions, causing the condensate to be unstable and collapse for all but a few atoms. Hulet's team subsequently showed the condensate could be stabilized by confinement quantum pressure for up to about 1000 atoms. Various isotopes have since been condensed.

Velocity-distribution data graph edit

In the image accompanying this article, the velocity-distribution data indicates the formation of a Bose–Einstein condensate out of a gas of rubidium atoms. The false colors indicate the number of atoms at each velocity, with red being the fewest and white being the most. The areas appearing white and light blue are at the lowest velocities. The peak is not infinitely narrow because of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle: spatially confined atoms have a minimum width velocity distribution. This width is given by the curvature of the magnetic potential in the given direction. More tightly confined directions have bigger widths in the ballistic velocity distribution. This anisotropy of the peak on the right is a purely quantum-mechanical effect and does not exist in the thermal distribution on the left. This graph served as the cover design for the 1999 textbook Thermal Physics by Ralph Baierlein.[32]

Quasiparticles edit

Bose–Einstein condensation also applies to quasiparticles in solids. Magnons, excitons, and polaritons have integer spin which means they are bosons that can form condensates.[33]

Magnons, electron spin waves, can be controlled by a magnetic field. Densities from the limit of a dilute gas to a strongly interacting Bose liquid are possible. Magnetic ordering is the analog of superfluidity. In 1999 condensation was demonstrated in antiferromagnetic TlCuCl
3
,[34] at temperatures as great as 14 K. The high transition temperature (relative to atomic gases) is due to the magnons' small mass (near that of an electron) and greater achievable density. In 2006, condensation in a ferromagnetic yttrium-iron-garnet thin film was seen even at room temperature,[35][36] with optical pumping.

Excitons, electron-hole pairs, were predicted to condense at low temperature and high density by Boer et al., in 1961.[citation needed] Bilayer system experiments first demonstrated condensation in 2003, by Hall voltage disappearance.[37] Fast optical exciton creation was used to form condensates in sub-kelvin Cu
2
O
in 2005 on.[citation needed]

Polariton condensation was first detected for exciton-polaritons in a quantum well microcavity kept at 5 K.[38]

In zero gravity edit

In June 2020, the Cold Atom Laboratory experiment on board the International Space Station successfully created a BEC of rubidium atoms and observed them for over a second in free-fall. Although initially just a proof of function, early results showed that, in the microgravity environment of the ISS, about half of the atoms formed into a magnetically insensitive halo-like cloud around the main body of the BEC.[39][40]

Peculiar properties edit

Quantized vortices edit

As in many other systems, vortices can exist in BECs.[41] Vortices can be created, for example, by "stirring" the condensate with lasers,[42] rotating the confining trap,[43] or by rapid cooling across the phase transition.[44] The vortex created will be a quantum vortex with core shape determined by the interactions.[45] Fluid circulation around any point is quantized due to the single-valued nature of the order BEC order parameter or wavefunction,[46] that can be written in the form   where   and   are as in the cylindrical coordinate system, and   is the angular quantum number (a.k.a. the "charge" of the vortex). Since the energy of a vortex is proportional to the square of its angular momentum, in trivial topology only   vortices can exist in the steady state; Higher-charge vortices will have a tendency to split into   vortices, if allowed by the topology of the geometry.

An axially symmetric (for instance, harmonic) confining potential is commonly used for the study of vortices in BEC. To determine  , the energy of   must be minimized, according to the constraint  . This is usually done computationally, however, in a uniform medium, the following analytic form demonstrates the correct behavior, and is a good approximation:

 

Here,   is the density far from the vortex and  , where   is the healing length of the condensate.

A singly charged vortex ( ) is in the ground state, with its energy   given by

 

where   is the farthest distance from the vortices considered.(To obtain an energy which is well defined it is necessary to include this boundary  .)

For multiply charged vortices ( ) the energy is approximated by

 

which is greater than that of   singly charged vortices, indicating that these multiply charged vortices are unstable to decay. Research has, however, indicated they are metastable states, so may have relatively long lifetimes.

Closely related to the creation of vortices in BECs is the generation of so-called dark solitons in one-dimensional BECs. These topological objects feature a phase gradient across their nodal plane, which stabilizes their shape even in propagation and interaction. Although solitons carry no charge and are thus prone to decay, relatively long-lived dark solitons have been produced and studied extensively.[47]

Attractive interactions edit

Experiments led by Randall Hulet at Rice University from 1995 through 2000 showed that lithium condensates with attractive interactions could stably exist up to a critical atom number. Quench cooling the gas, they observed the condensate to grow, then subsequently collapse as the attraction overwhelmed the zero-point energy of the confining potential, in a burst reminiscent of a supernova, with an explosion preceded by an implosion.

Further work on attractive condensates was performed in 2000 by the JILA team, of Cornell, Wieman and coworkers. Their instrumentation now had better control so they used naturally attracting atoms of rubidium-85 (having negative atom–atom scattering length). Through Feshbach resonance involving a sweep of the magnetic field causing spin flip collisions, they lowered the characteristic, discrete energies at which rubidium bonds, making their Rb-85 atoms repulsive and creating a stable condensate. The reversible flip from attraction to repulsion stems from quantum interference among wave-like condensate atoms.

When the JILA team raised the magnetic field strength further, the condensate suddenly reverted to attraction, imploded and shrank beyond detection, then exploded, expelling about two-thirds of its 10,000 atoms. About half of the atoms in the condensate seemed to have disappeared from the experiment altogether, not seen in the cold remnant or expanding gas cloud.[30] Carl Wieman explained that under current atomic theory this characteristic of Bose–Einstein condensate could not be explained because the energy state of an atom near absolute zero should not be enough to cause an implosion; however, subsequent mean-field theories have been proposed to explain it. Most likely they formed molecules of two rubidium atoms;[48] energy gained by this bond imparts velocity sufficient to leave the trap without being detected.

The process of creation of molecular Bose condensate during the sweep of the magnetic field throughout the Feshbach resonance, as well as the reverse process, are described by the exactly solvable model that can explain many experimental observations.[49]

Current research edit

Unsolved problem in physics:

How do we rigorously prove the existence of Bose–Einstein condensates for generally interacting systems?

Compared to more commonly encountered states of matter, Bose–Einstein condensates are extremely fragile.[50] The slightest interaction with the external environment can be enough to warm them past the condensation threshold, eliminating their interesting properties and forming a normal gas.[51]

Nevertheless, they have proven useful in exploring a wide range of questions in fundamental physics, and the years since the initial discoveries by the JILA and MIT groups have seen an increase in experimental and theoretical activity. Examples include experiments that have demonstrated interference between condensates due to wave–particle duality,[52] the study of superfluidity and quantized vortices, the creation of bright matter wave solitons from Bose condensates confined to one dimension, and the slowing of light pulses to very low speeds using electromagnetically induced transparency.[53] Vortices in Bose–Einstein condensates are also currently the subject of analogue gravity research, studying the possibility of modeling black holes and their related phenomena in such environments in the laboratory. Experimenters have also realized "optical lattices", where the interference pattern from overlapping lasers provides a periodic potential. These have been used to explore the transition between a superfluid and a Mott insulator,[54] and may be useful in studying Bose–Einstein condensation in fewer than three dimensions, for example the Tonks–Girardeau gas. Further, the sensitivity of the pinning transition of strongly interacting bosons confined in a shallow one-dimensional optical lattice originally observed by Haller[55] has been explored via a tweaking of the primary optical lattice by a secondary weaker one.[56] Thus for a resulting weak bichromatic optical lattice, it has been found that the pinning transition is robust against the introduction of the weaker secondary optical lattice. Studies of vortices in nonuniform Bose–Einstein condensates[57] as well as excitations of these systems by the application of moving repulsive or attractive obstacles, have also been undertaken.[58][59] Within this context, the conditions for order and chaos in the dynamics of a trapped Bose–Einstein condensate have been explored by the application of moving blue and red-detuned laser beams (hitting frequencies slightly above and below the resonance frequency, respectively) via the time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation.[60]

Bose–Einstein condensates composed of a wide range of isotopes have been produced.[61]

Cooling fermions to extremely low temperatures has created degenerate gases, subject to the Pauli exclusion principle. To exhibit Bose–Einstein condensation, the fermions must "pair up" to form bosonic compound particles (e.g. molecules or Cooper pairs). The first molecular condensates were created in November 2003 by the groups of Rudolf Grimm at the University of Innsbruck, Deborah S. Jin at the University of Colorado at Boulder and Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT. Jin quickly went on to create the first fermionic condensate, working with the same system but outside the molecular regime.[62]

In 1999, Danish physicist Lene Hau led a team from Harvard University which slowed a beam of light to about 17 meters per second[clarification needed] using a superfluid.[63] Hau and her associates have since made a group of condensate atoms recoil from a light pulse such that they recorded the light's phase and amplitude, recovered by a second nearby condensate, in what they term "slow-light-mediated atomic matter-wave amplification" using Bose–Einstein condensates.[64]

Another current research interest is the creation of Bose–Einstein condensates in microgravity in order to use its properties for high precision atom interferometry. The first demonstration of a BEC in weightlessness was achieved in 2008 at a drop tower in Bremen, Germany by a consortium of researchers led by Ernst M. Rasel from Leibniz University Hannover.[65] The same team demonstrated in 2017 the first creation of a Bose–Einstein condensate in space[66] and it is also the subject of two upcoming experiments on the International Space Station.[67][68]

Researchers in the new field of atomtronics use the properties of Bose–Einstein condensates in the emerging quantum technology of matter-wave circuits.[69][70]

In 1970, BECs were proposed by Emmanuel David Tannenbaum for anti-stealth technology.[71]

In 2020, researchers reported the development of superconducting BEC and that there appears to be a "smooth transition between" BEC and Bardeen–Cooper–Shrieffer regimes.[72][73]

Continuous Bose–Einstein condensation edit

Limitations of evaporative cooling have restricted atomic BECs to "pulsed" operation, involving a highly inefficient duty cycle that discards more than 99% of atoms to reach BEC. Achieving continuous BEC has been a major open problem of experimental BEC research, driven by the same motivations as continuous optical laser development: high flux, high coherence matter waves produced continuously would enable new sensing applications.

Continuous BEC was achieved for the first time in 2022.[74]

Dark matter edit

P. Sikivie and Q. Yang showed that cold dark matter axions would form a Bose–Einstein condensate by thermalisation because of gravitational self-interactions.[75] Axions have not yet been confirmed to exist. However the important search for them has been greatly enhanced with the completion of upgrades to the Axion Dark Matter Experiment (ADMX) at the University of Washington in early 2018.

In 2014, a potential dibaryon was detected at the Jülich Research Center at about 2380 MeV. The center claimed that the measurements confirm results from 2011, via a more replicable method.[76][77] The particle existed for 10−23 seconds and was named d*(2380).[78] This particle is hypothesized to consist of three up and three down quarks.[79] It is theorized that groups of d* (d-stars) could form Bose–Einstein condensates due to prevailing low temperatures in the early universe, and that BECs made of such hexaquarks with trapped electrons could behave like dark matter.[80][81][82]

Isotopes edit

The effect has mainly been observed on alkaline atoms which have nuclear properties particularly suitable for working with traps. As of 2012, using ultra-low temperatures of   or below, Bose–Einstein condensates had been obtained for a multitude of isotopes, mainly of alkali metal, alkaline earth metal, and lanthanide atoms (7
Li
, 23
Na
, 39
K
, 41
K
, 85
Rb
, 87
Rb
, 133
Cs
, 52
Cr
, 40
Ca
, 84
Sr
, 86
Sr
, 88
Sr
, 174
Yb
, 164
Dy
, and 168
Er
). Research was finally successful in hydrogen with the aid of the newly developed method of 'evaporative cooling'.[83] In contrast, the superfluid state of 4
He
below 2.17 K is not a good example, because the interaction between the atoms is too strong. Only 8% of atoms are in the ground state of the trap near absolute zero, rather than the 100% of a true condensate.[84]

The bosonic behavior of some of these alkaline gases appears odd at first sight, because their nuclei have half-integer total spin. It arises from a subtle interplay of electronic and nuclear spins: at ultra-low temperatures and corresponding excitation energies, the half-integer total spin of the electronic shell and half-integer total spin of the nucleus are coupled by a very weak hyperfine interaction. The total spin of the atom, arising from this coupling, is an integer lower value. The chemistry of systems at room temperature is determined by the electronic properties, which is essentially fermionic, since room temperature thermal excitations have typical energies much higher than the hyperfine values.

In fiction edit

  • In the 2016 film Spectral, the US military battles mysterious enemy creatures fashioned out of Bose–Einstein condensates.[85]
  • In the 2003 novel Blind Lake, scientists observe sentient life on a planet 51 light-years away using telescopes powered by Bose–Einstein condensate-based quantum computers.
  • The video game franchise Mass Effect has cryonic ammunition whose flavour text describes it as being filled with Bose–Einstein condensates. Upon impact, the bullets rupture and spray super-cold liquid on the enemy.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ A. Douglas Stone, Chapter 24, The Indian Comet, in the book Einstein and the Quantum, Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 2013.
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  15. ^ (sequence A078434 in the OEIS)
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  • C. Barcelo; S. Liberati & M. Visser (2001). "Analogue gravity from Bose–Einstein condensates". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 18 (6): 1137–1156. arXiv:gr-qc/0011026. Bibcode:2001CQGra..18.1137B. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/18/6/312. S2CID 14811185.
  • P. G. Kevrekidis; R. Carretero-González; D. J. Frantzeskakis & I. G. Kevrekidis (2004). "Vortices in Bose–Einstein Condensates: Some Recent Developments". Mod. Phys. Lett. B. 18 (30): 1481–1505. arXiv:cond-mat/0501030. Bibcode:2004MPLB...18.1481K. doi:10.1142/S0217984904007967. S2CID 12111421.
  • K.B. Davis; M.-O. Mewes; M.R. Andrews; N.J. van Druten; D.S. Durfee; D.M. Kurn & W. Ketterle (1995). . Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 (22): 3969–3973. Bibcode:1995PhRvL..75.3969D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.75.3969. PMID 10059782. S2CID 975895. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 24 October 2017..
  • D. S. Jin; J. R. Ensher; M. R. Matthews; C. E. Wieman & E. A. Cornell (1996). "Collective Excitations of a Bose–Einstein Condensate in a Dilute Gas". Phys. Rev. Lett. 77 (3): 420–423. Bibcode:1996PhRvL..77..420J. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.77.420. PMID 10062808.
  • M. R. Andrews; C. G. Townsend; H.-J. Miesner; D. S. Durfee; D. M. Kurn & W. Ketterle (1997). . Science. 275 (5300): 637–641. doi:10.1126/science.275.5300.637. PMID 9005843. S2CID 38284718. Archived from the original on 12 October 2000. Retrieved 26 October 2017..
  • E. A. Cornell & C. E. Wieman (1998). "The Bose–Einstein condensate". Scientific American. 278 (3): 40–45. Bibcode:1998SciAm.278c..40C. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0398-40.
  • M. R. Matthews; B. P. Anderson; P. C. Haljan; D. S. Hall; C. E. Wieman & E. A. Cornell (1999). "Vortices in a Bose–Einstein condensate". Phys. Rev. Lett. 83 (13): 2498–2501. arXiv:cond-mat/9908209. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..83.2498M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.83.2498. S2CID 535347.
  • E. A. Donley; N. R. Claussen; S. L. Cornish; J. L. Roberts; E. A. Cornell & C. E. Wieman (2001). "Dynamics of collapsing and exploding Bose–Einstein condensates". Nature. 412 (6844): 295–299. arXiv:cond-mat/0105019. Bibcode:2001Natur.412..295D. doi:10.1038/35085500. PMID 11460153. S2CID 969048.
  • A. G. Truscott; K. E. Strecker; W. I. McAlexander; G. B. Partridge & R. G. Hulet (2001). "Observation of Fermi Pressure in a Gas of Trapped Atoms". Science. 291 (5513): 2570–2572. Bibcode:2001Sci...291.2570T. doi:10.1126/science.1059318. PMID 11283362. S2CID 31126288.
  • M. Greiner; O. Mandel; T. Esslinger; T. W. Hänsch & I. Bloch (2002). "Quantum phase transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator in a gas of ultracold atoms". Nature. 415 (6867): 39–44. Bibcode:2002Natur.415...39G. doi:10.1038/415039a. PMID 11780110. S2CID 4411344..
  • S. Jochim; M. Bartenstein; A. Altmeyer; G. Hendl; S. Riedl; C. Chin; J. Hecker Denschlag & R. Grimm (2003). "Bose–Einstein Condensation of Molecules". Science. 302 (5653): 2101–2103. Bibcode:2003Sci...302.2101J. doi:10.1126/science.1093280. PMID 14615548. S2CID 13041446.
  • M. Greiner; C. A. Regal & D. S. Jin (2003). "Emergence of a molecular Bose−Einstein condensate from a Fermi gas". Nature. 426 (6966): 537–540. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..537G. doi:10.1038/nature02199. PMID 14647340. S2CID 4348155.
  • M. W. Zwierlein; C. A. Stan; C. H. Schunck; S. M. F. Raupach; S. Gupta; Z. Hadzibabic & W. Ketterle (2003). "Observation of Bose–Einstein Condensation of Molecules". Phys. Rev. Lett. 91 (25): 250401. arXiv:cond-mat/0311617. Bibcode:2003PhRvL..91y0401Z. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.91.250401. PMID 14754098. S2CID 8342544.
  • C. A. Regal; M. Greiner & D. S. Jin (2004). "Observation of Resonance Condensation of Fermionic Atom Pairs". Phys. Rev. Lett. 92 (4): 040403. arXiv:cond-mat/0401554. Bibcode:2004PhRvL..92d0403R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.92.040403. PMID 14995356. S2CID 10799388.
  • C. J. Pethick and H. Smith, Bose–Einstein Condensation in Dilute Gases, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2001.
  • Lev P. Pitaevskii and S. Stringari, Bose–Einstein Condensation, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 2003.
  • M. Mackie; K. A. Suominen & J. Javanainen (2002). "Mean-field theory of Feshbach-resonant interactions in 85Rb condensates". Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 (18): 180403. arXiv:cond-mat/0205535. Bibcode:2002PhRvL..89r0403M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.89.180403. PMID 12398586. S2CID 40421182.
  • Monique Combescot and Shiue-Yuan Shiau, "Excitons and Cooper Pairs: Two Composite Bosons in Many-Body Physics", Oxford University Press (ISBN 9780198753735).

External links edit

  • – Frontiers in Quantum Gases
  • General introduction to Bose–Einstein condensation
  • Nobel Prize in Physics 2001 – for the achievement of Bose–Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates
  • Levi, Barbara G. (2001). "Cornell, Ketterle, and Wieman Share Nobel Prize for Bose–Einstein Condensates". Physics Today. 54 (12): 14–16. Bibcode:2001PhT....54l..14L. doi:10.1063/1.1445529.
  • Bose–Einstein condensates at JILA
  • Atomcool at Rice University
  • Atom Optics at UQ
  • Einstein's manuscript on the Bose–Einstein condensate discovered at Leiden University
  • Bose–Einstein condensate on arxiv.org
  • Bosons – The Birds That Flock and Sing Together
  • Easy BEC machine – information on constructing a Bose–Einstein condensate machine.
  • Verging on absolute zero – Cosmos Online 22 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Lecture by W Ketterle at MIT in 2001
  • NIST resource on BEC

bose, einstein, condensate, super, atom, redirects, here, clusters, atoms, that, seem, exhibit, some, properties, elemental, atoms, superatom, condensed, matter, physics, state, matter, that, typically, formed, when, bosons, very, densities, cooled, temperatur. Super atom redirects here For clusters of atoms that seem to exhibit some of the properties of elemental atoms see Superatom In condensed matter physics a Bose Einstein condensate BEC is a state of matter that is typically formed when a gas of bosons at very low densities is cooled to temperatures very close to absolute zero 273 15 C or 459 67 F Under such conditions a large fraction of bosons occupy the lowest quantum state at which microscopic quantum mechanical phenomena particularly wavefunction interference become apparent macroscopically source source source source source source source source track Schematic Bose Einstein condensation versus temperature of the energy diagramThis state was first predicted generally in 1924 1925 by Albert Einstein 1 crediting a pioneering paper by Satyendra Nath Bose on the new field now known as quantum statistics 2 In 1995 the Bose Einstein condensate was created by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman of the University of Colorado Boulder using rubidium atoms later that year Wolfgang Ketterle of MIT produced a BEC using sodium atoms In 2001 Cornell Wieman and Ketterle shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for the achievement of Bose Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates 3 Contents 1 History 2 Critical temperature 3 Derivation 3 1 Ideal Bose gas 4 Models 4 1 Bose Einstein s non interacting gas 4 2 Bogoliubov theory for weakly interacting gas 4 3 Gross Pitaevskii equation 5 Numerical solution 5 1 Weaknesses of Gross Pitaevskii model 5 2 Other 5 3 Superfluidity of BEC and Landau criterion 6 Experimental observation 6 1 Superfluid helium 4 6 2 Dilute atomic gases 6 2 1 Velocity distribution data graph 6 3 Quasiparticles 6 4 In zero gravity 7 Peculiar properties 7 1 Quantized vortices 7 2 Attractive interactions 8 Current research 8 1 Continuous Bose Einstein condensation 8 2 Dark matter 8 3 Isotopes 9 In fiction 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Velocity distribution data 3 views for a gas of rubidium atoms confirming the discovery of a new phase of matter the Bose Einstein condensate Left just before the appearance of a Bose Einstein condensate Center just after the appearance of the condensate Right after further evaporation leaving a sample of nearly pure condensate Bose first sent a paper to Einstein on the quantum statistics of light quanta now called photons in which he derived Planck s quantum radiation law without any reference to classical physics Einstein was impressed translated the paper himself from English to German and submitted it for Bose to the Zeitschrift fur Physik which published it in 1924 4 The Einstein manuscript once believed to be lost was found in a library at Leiden University in 2005 5 Einstein then extended Bose s ideas to matter in two other papers 6 7 The result of their efforts is the concept of a Bose gas governed by Bose Einstein statistics which describes the statistical distribution of identical particles with integer spin now called bosons Bosons particles that include the photon as well as atoms such as helium 4 4 He are allowed to share a quantum state Einstein proposed that cooling bosonic atoms to a very low temperature would cause them to fall or condense into the lowest accessible quantum state resulting in a new form of matter In 1938 Fritz London proposed the BEC as a mechanism for superfluidity in 4 He and superconductivity 8 9 The quest to produce a Bose Einstein condensate in the laboratory was stimulated by a paper published in 1976 by two Program Directors at the National Science Foundation William Stwalley and Lewis Nosanow 10 This led to the immediate pursuit of the idea by four independent research groups these were led by Isaac Silvera University of Amsterdam Walter Hardy University of British Columbia Thomas Greytak Massachusetts Institute of Technology and David Lee Cornell University 11 On 5 June 1995 the first gaseous condensate was produced by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman at the University of Colorado at Boulder NIST JILA lab in a gas of rubidium atoms cooled to 170 nanokelvins nK 12 Shortly thereafter Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT produced a Bose Einstein Condensate in a gas of sodium atoms For their achievements Cornell Wieman and Ketterle received the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics 13 These early studies founded the field of ultracold atoms and hundreds of research groups around the world now routinely produce BECs of dilute atomic vapors in their labs Since 1995 many other atomic species have been condensed and BECs have also been realized using molecules quasi particles and photons 14 Critical temperature editThis transition to BEC occurs below a critical temperature which for a uniform three dimensional gas consisting of non interacting particles with no apparent internal degrees of freedom is given by T c n z 3 2 2 3 2 p ℏ 2 m k B 3 3125 ℏ 2 n 2 3 m k B displaystyle T rm c left frac n zeta 3 2 right 2 3 frac 2 pi hbar 2 mk rm B approx 3 3125 frac hbar 2 n 2 3 mk rm B nbsp where T c displaystyle T rm c nbsp is the critical temperature n displaystyle n nbsp the particle density m displaystyle m nbsp the mass per boson ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp the reduced Planck constant k B displaystyle k rm B nbsp the Boltzmann constant andz displaystyle zeta nbsp the Riemann zeta function z 3 2 2 6124 displaystyle zeta 3 2 approx 2 6124 nbsp 15 Interactions shift the value and the corrections can be calculated by mean field theory This formula is derived from finding the gas degeneracy in the Bose gas using Bose Einstein statistics Derivation editIdeal Bose gas edit For an ideal Bose gas we have the equation of state 1 v 1 l 3 g 3 2 f 1 V f 1 f displaystyle frac 1 v frac 1 lambda 3 g 3 2 f frac 1 V frac f 1 f nbsp where v V N displaystyle v V N nbsp is the per particle volume l displaystyle lambda nbsp the thermal wavelength f displaystyle f nbsp the fugacity and g a f n 1 f n n a displaystyle g alpha f sum limits n 1 infty frac f n n alpha nbsp It is noticeable that g 3 2 displaystyle g 3 2 nbsp is a monotonically growing function of f displaystyle f nbsp in f 0 1 displaystyle f in 0 1 nbsp which are the only values for which the series converge Recognizing that the second term on the right hand side contains the expression for the average occupation number of the fundamental state n 0 displaystyle langle n 0 rangle nbsp the equation of state can be rewritten as 1 v 1 l 3 g 3 2 f n 0 V n 0 V l 3 l 3 v g 3 2 f displaystyle frac 1 v frac 1 lambda 3 g 3 2 f frac langle n 0 rangle V Leftrightarrow frac langle n 0 rangle V lambda 3 frac lambda 3 v g 3 2 f nbsp Because the left term on the second equation must always be positive l 3 v gt g 3 2 f displaystyle frac lambda 3 v gt g 3 2 f nbsp and because g 3 2 f g 3 2 1 displaystyle g 3 2 f leq g 3 2 1 nbsp a stronger condition is l 3 v gt g 3 2 1 displaystyle frac lambda 3 v gt g 3 2 1 nbsp which defines a transition between a gas phase and a condensed phase On the critical region it is possible to define a critical temperature and thermal wavelength l c 3 g 3 2 1 v z 3 2 v displaystyle lambda c 3 g 3 2 1 v zeta 3 2 v nbsp T c 2 p ℏ 2 m k B l c 2 displaystyle T c frac 2 pi hbar 2 mk B lambda c 2 nbsp recovering the value indicated on the previous section The critical values are such that if T lt T c displaystyle T lt T c nbsp or l gt l c displaystyle lambda gt lambda c nbsp we are in the presence of a Bose Einstein condensate Understanding what happens with the fraction of particles on the fundamental level is crucial As so write the equation of state for f 1 displaystyle f 1 nbsp obtaining n 0 N 1 l c l 3 displaystyle frac langle n 0 rangle N 1 left frac lambda c lambda right 3 nbsp and equivalently n 0 N 1 T T c 3 2 displaystyle frac langle n 0 rangle N 1 left frac T T c right 3 2 nbsp So if T T c displaystyle T ll T c nbsp the fraction n 0 N 1 displaystyle frac langle n 0 rangle N approx 1 nbsp and if T T c displaystyle T gg T c nbsp the fraction n 0 N 0 displaystyle frac langle n 0 rangle N approx 0 nbsp At temperatures near to absolute 0 particles tend to condensate in the fundamental state which is the state with momentum p 0 displaystyle vec p 0 nbsp Models editBose Einstein s non interacting gas edit Main article Bose gas Consider a collection of N non interacting particles which can each be in one of two quantum states 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp and 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp If the two states are equal in energy each different configuration is equally likely If we can tell which particle is which there are 2 N displaystyle 2 N nbsp different configurations since each particle can be in 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp or 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp independently In almost all of the configurations about half the particles are in 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp and the other half in 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp The balance is a statistical effect the number of configurations is largest when the particles are divided equally If the particles are indistinguishable however there are only N 1 different configurations If there are K particles in state 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp there are N K particles in state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp Whether any particular particle is in state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp or in state 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp cannot be determined so each value of K determines a unique quantum state for the whole system Suppose now that the energy of state 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp is slightly greater than the energy of state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp by an amount E At temperature T a particle will have a lesser probability to be in state 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp by e E k T displaystyle e E kT nbsp In the distinguishable case the particle distribution will be biased slightly towards state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp But in the indistinguishable case since there is no statistical pressure toward equal numbers the most likely outcome is that most of the particles will collapse into state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp In the distinguishable case for large N the fraction in state 0 displaystyle 0 rangle nbsp can be computed It is the same as flipping a coin with probability proportional to p exp E T to land tails In the indistinguishable case each value of K is a single state which has its own separate Boltzmann probability So the probability distribution is exponential P K C e K E T C p K displaystyle P K Ce KE T Cp K nbsp For large N the normalization constant C is 1 p The expected total number of particles not in the lowest energy state in the limit that N displaystyle N rightarrow infty nbsp is equal to n gt 0 C n p n p 1 p displaystyle sum n gt 0 Cnp n p 1 p nbsp It does not grow when N is large it just approaches a constant This will be a negligible fraction of the total number of particles So a collection of enough Bose particles in thermal equilibrium will mostly be in the ground state with only a few in any excited state no matter how small the energy difference Consider now a gas of particles which can be in different momentum states labeled k displaystyle k rangle nbsp If the number of particles is less than the number of thermally accessible states for high temperatures and low densities the particles will all be in different states In this limit the gas is classical As the density increases or the temperature decreases the number of accessible states per particle becomes smaller and at some point more particles will be forced into a single state than the maximum allowed for that state by statistical weighting From this point on any extra particle added will go into the ground state To calculate the transition temperature at any density integrate over all momentum states the expression for maximum number of excited particles p 1 p N V d 3 k 2 p 3 p k 1 p k V d 3 k 2 p 3 1 e k 2 2 m T 1 displaystyle N V int d 3 k over 2 pi 3 p k over 1 p k V int d 3 k over 2 pi 3 1 over e k 2 over 2mT 1 nbsp p k e k 2 2 m T displaystyle p k e k 2 over 2mT nbsp When the integral also known as Bose Einstein integral is evaluated with factors of k B displaystyle k B nbsp and ℏ restored by dimensional analysis it gives the critical temperature formula of the preceding section Therefore this integral defines the critical temperature and particle number corresponding to the conditions of negligible chemical potential m displaystyle mu nbsp In Bose Einstein statistics distribution m displaystyle mu nbsp is actually still nonzero for BECs however m displaystyle mu nbsp is less than the ground state energy Except when specifically talking about the ground state m displaystyle mu nbsp can be approximated for most energy or momentum states as m 0 displaystyle mu approx 0 nbsp Bogoliubov theory for weakly interacting gas edit Nikolay Bogoliubov considered perturbations on the limit of dilute gas 16 finding a finite pressure at zero temperature and positive chemical potential This leads to corrections for the ground state The Bogoliubov state has pressure T 0 P g n 2 2 displaystyle P gn 2 2 nbsp The original interacting system can be converted to a system of non interacting particles with a dispersion law Gross Pitaevskii equation edit Main article Gross Pitaevskii equation In some simplest cases the state of condensed particles can be described with a nonlinear Schrodinger equation also known as Gross Pitaevskii or Ginzburg Landau equation The validity of this approach is actually limited to the case of ultracold temperatures which fits well for the most alkali atoms experiments This approach originates from the assumption that the state of the BEC can be described by the unique wavefunction of the condensate ps r displaystyle psi vec r nbsp For a system of this nature ps r 2 displaystyle psi vec r 2 nbsp is interpreted as the particle density so the total number of atoms is N d r ps r 2 displaystyle N int d vec r psi vec r 2 nbsp Provided essentially all atoms are in the condensate that is have condensed to the ground state and treating the bosons using mean field theory the energy E associated with the state ps r displaystyle psi vec r nbsp is E d r ℏ 2 2 m ps r 2 V r ps r 2 1 2 U 0 ps r 4 displaystyle E int d vec r left frac hbar 2 2m nabla psi vec r 2 V vec r psi vec r 2 frac 1 2 U 0 psi vec r 4 right nbsp Minimizing this energy with respect to infinitesimal variations in ps r displaystyle psi vec r nbsp and holding the number of atoms constant yields the Gross Pitaevski equation GPE also a non linear Schrodinger equation i ℏ ps r t ℏ 2 2 2 m V r U 0 ps r 2 ps r displaystyle i hbar frac partial psi vec r partial t left frac hbar 2 nabla 2 2m V vec r U 0 psi vec r 2 right psi vec r nbsp where m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass of the bosons V r displaystyle V vec r nbsp is the external potential andU 0 displaystyle U 0 nbsp represents the inter particle interactions In the case of zero external potential the dispersion law of interacting Bose Einstein condensed particles is given by so called Bogoliubov spectrum for T 0 displaystyle T 0 nbsp w p p 2 2 m p 2 2 m 2 U 0 n 0 displaystyle omega p sqrt frac p 2 2m left frac p 2 2m 2 U 0 n 0 right nbsp The Gross Pitaevskii equation GPE provides a relatively good description of the behavior of atomic BEC s However GPE does not take into account the temperature dependence of dynamical variables and is therefore valid only for T 0 displaystyle T 0 nbsp It is not applicable for example for the condensates of excitons magnons and photons where the critical temperature is comparable to room temperature Numerical solution editThe Gross Pitaevskii equation is a partial differential equation in space and time variables Usually it does not have analytic solution and different numerical methods such as split step Crank Nicolson 17 and Fourier spectral 18 methods are used for its solution There are different Fortran and C programs for its solution for contact interaction 19 20 and long range dipolar interaction 21 which can be freely used Weaknesses of Gross Pitaevskii model edit The Gross Pitaevskii model of BEC is a physical approximation valid for certain classes of BECs By construction the GPE uses the following simplifications it assumes that interactions between condensate particles are of the contact two body type and also neglects anomalous contributions to self energy 22 These assumptions are suitable mostly for the dilute three dimensional condensates If one relaxes any of these assumptions the equation for the condensate wavefunction acquires the terms containing higher order powers of the wavefunction Moreover for some physical systems the amount of such terms turns out to be infinite therefore the equation becomes essentially non polynomial The examples where this could happen are the Bose Fermi composite condensates 23 24 25 26 effectively lower dimensional condensates 27 and dense condensates and superfluid clusters and droplets 28 It is found that one has to go beyond the Gross Pitaevskii equation For example the logarithmic term ps ln ps 2 displaystyle psi ln psi 2 nbsp found in the Logarithmic Schrodinger equation must be added to the Gross Pitaevskii equation along with a Ginzburg Sobyanin contribution to correctly determine that the speed of sound scales as the cubic root of pressure for Helium 4 at very low temperatures in close agreement with experiment 29 Other edit However it is clear that in a general case the behaviour of Bose Einstein condensate can be described by coupled evolution equations for condensate density superfluid velocity and distribution function of elementary excitations This problem was solved in 1977 by Peletminskii et al in microscopical approach The Peletminskii equations are valid for any finite temperatures below the critical point Years after in 1985 Kirkpatrick and Dorfman obtained similar equations using another microscopical approach The Peletminskii equations also reproduce Khalatnikov hydrodynamical equations for superfluid as a limiting case Superfluidity of BEC and Landau criterion edit The phenomena of superfluidity of a Bose gas and superconductivity of a strongly correlated Fermi gas a gas of Cooper pairs are tightly connected to Bose Einstein condensation Under corresponding conditions below the temperature of phase transition these phenomena were observed in helium 4 and different classes of superconductors In this sense the superconductivity is often called the superfluidity of Fermi gas In the simplest form the origin of superfluidity can be seen from the weakly interacting bosons model Experimental observation editSuperfluid helium 4 edit Main article Superfluid helium 4 In 1938 Pyotr Kapitsa John Allen and Don Misener discovered that helium 4 became a new kind of fluid now known as a superfluid at temperatures less than 2 17 K the lambda point Superfluid helium has many unusual properties including zero viscosity the ability to flow without dissipating energy and the existence of quantized vortices It was quickly believed that the superfluidity was due to partial Bose Einstein condensation of the liquid In fact many properties of superfluid helium also appear in gaseous condensates created by Cornell Wieman and Ketterle see below Superfluid helium 4 is a liquid rather than a gas which means that the interactions between the atoms are relatively strong the original theory of Bose Einstein condensation must be heavily modified in order to describe it Bose Einstein condensation remains however fundamental to the superfluid properties of helium 4 Note that helium 3 a fermion also enters a superfluid phase at a much lower temperature which can be explained by the formation of bosonic Cooper pairs of two atoms see also fermionic condensate Dilute atomic gases edit The first pure Bose Einstein condensate was created by Eric Cornell Carl Wieman and co workers at JILA on 5 June 1995 12 They cooled a dilute vapor of approximately two thousand rubidium 87 atoms to below 170 nK using a combination of laser cooling a technique that won its inventors Steven Chu Claude Cohen Tannoudji and William D Phillips the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics and magnetic evaporative cooling About four months later an independent effort led by Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT condensed sodium 23 Ketterle s condensate had a hundred times more atoms allowing important results such as the observation of quantum mechanical interference between two different condensates Cornell Wieman and Ketterle won the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics for their achievements 30 A group led by Randall Hulet at Rice University announced a condensate of lithium atoms only one month following the JILA work 31 Lithium has attractive interactions causing the condensate to be unstable and collapse for all but a few atoms Hulet s team subsequently showed the condensate could be stabilized by confinement quantum pressure for up to about 1000 atoms Various isotopes have since been condensed Velocity distribution data graph edit In the image accompanying this article the velocity distribution data indicates the formation of a Bose Einstein condensate out of a gas of rubidium atoms The false colors indicate the number of atoms at each velocity with red being the fewest and white being the most The areas appearing white and light blue are at the lowest velocities The peak is not infinitely narrow because of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle spatially confined atoms have a minimum width velocity distribution This width is given by the curvature of the magnetic potential in the given direction More tightly confined directions have bigger widths in the ballistic velocity distribution This anisotropy of the peak on the right is a purely quantum mechanical effect and does not exist in the thermal distribution on the left This graph served as the cover design for the 1999 textbook Thermal Physics by Ralph Baierlein 32 Quasiparticles edit Main article Bose Einstein condensation of quasiparticlesBose Einstein condensation also applies to quasiparticles in solids Magnons excitons and polaritons have integer spin which means they are bosons that can form condensates 33 Magnons electron spin waves can be controlled by a magnetic field Densities from the limit of a dilute gas to a strongly interacting Bose liquid are possible Magnetic ordering is the analog of superfluidity In 1999 condensation was demonstrated in antiferromagnetic TlCuCl3 34 at temperatures as great as 14 K The high transition temperature relative to atomic gases is due to the magnons small mass near that of an electron and greater achievable density In 2006 condensation in a ferromagnetic yttrium iron garnet thin film was seen even at room temperature 35 36 with optical pumping Excitons electron hole pairs were predicted to condense at low temperature and high density by Boer et al in 1961 citation needed Bilayer system experiments first demonstrated condensation in 2003 by Hall voltage disappearance 37 Fast optical exciton creation was used to form condensates in sub kelvin Cu2 O in 2005 on citation needed Polariton condensation was first detected for exciton polaritons in a quantum well microcavity kept at 5 K 38 In zero gravity edit In June 2020 the Cold Atom Laboratory experiment on board the International Space Station successfully created a BEC of rubidium atoms and observed them for over a second in free fall Although initially just a proof of function early results showed that in the microgravity environment of the ISS about half of the atoms formed into a magnetically insensitive halo like cloud around the main body of the BEC 39 40 Peculiar properties editQuantized vortices edit As in many other systems vortices can exist in BECs 41 Vortices can be created for example by stirring the condensate with lasers 42 rotating the confining trap 43 or by rapid cooling across the phase transition 44 The vortex created will be a quantum vortex with core shape determined by the interactions 45 Fluid circulation around any point is quantized due to the single valued nature of the order BEC order parameter or wavefunction 46 that can be written in the form ps r ϕ r z e i ℓ 8 displaystyle psi vec r phi rho z e i ell theta nbsp where r z displaystyle rho z nbsp and 8 displaystyle theta nbsp are as in the cylindrical coordinate system and ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp is the angular quantum number a k a the charge of the vortex Since the energy of a vortex is proportional to the square of its angular momentum in trivial topology only ℓ 1 displaystyle ell 1 nbsp vortices can exist in the steady state Higher charge vortices will have a tendency to split into ℓ 1 displaystyle ell 1 nbsp vortices if allowed by the topology of the geometry An axially symmetric for instance harmonic confining potential is commonly used for the study of vortices in BEC To determine ϕ r z displaystyle phi rho z nbsp the energy of ps r displaystyle psi vec r nbsp must be minimized according to the constraint ps r ϕ r z e i ℓ 8 displaystyle psi vec r phi rho z e i ell theta nbsp This is usually done computationally however in a uniform medium the following analytic form demonstrates the correct behavior and is a good approximation ϕ n x 2 x 2 displaystyle phi frac nx sqrt 2 x 2 nbsp Here n displaystyle n nbsp is the density far from the vortex and x r ℓ 3 displaystyle x rho ell xi nbsp where 3 1 8 p a s n 0 displaystyle xi 1 sqrt 8 pi a s n 0 nbsp is the healing length of the condensate A singly charged vortex ℓ 1 displaystyle ell 1 nbsp is in the ground state with its energy ϵ v displaystyle epsilon v nbsp given by ϵ v p n ℏ 2 m ln 1 464 b 3 displaystyle epsilon v pi n frac hbar 2 m ln left 1 464 frac b xi right nbsp where b displaystyle b nbsp is the farthest distance from the vortices considered To obtain an energy which is well defined it is necessary to include this boundary b displaystyle b nbsp For multiply charged vortices ℓ gt 1 displaystyle ell gt 1 nbsp the energy is approximated by ϵ v ℓ 2 p n ℏ 2 m ln b 3 displaystyle epsilon v approx ell 2 pi n frac hbar 2 m ln left frac b xi right nbsp which is greater than that of ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp singly charged vortices indicating that these multiply charged vortices are unstable to decay Research has however indicated they are metastable states so may have relatively long lifetimes Closely related to the creation of vortices in BECs is the generation of so called dark solitons in one dimensional BECs These topological objects feature a phase gradient across their nodal plane which stabilizes their shape even in propagation and interaction Although solitons carry no charge and are thus prone to decay relatively long lived dark solitons have been produced and studied extensively 47 Attractive interactions edit Experiments led by Randall Hulet at Rice University from 1995 through 2000 showed that lithium condensates with attractive interactions could stably exist up to a critical atom number Quench cooling the gas they observed the condensate to grow then subsequently collapse as the attraction overwhelmed the zero point energy of the confining potential in a burst reminiscent of a supernova with an explosion preceded by an implosion Further work on attractive condensates was performed in 2000 by the JILA team of Cornell Wieman and coworkers Their instrumentation now had better control so they used naturally attracting atoms of rubidium 85 having negative atom atom scattering length Through Feshbach resonance involving a sweep of the magnetic field causing spin flip collisions they lowered the characteristic discrete energies at which rubidium bonds making their Rb 85 atoms repulsive and creating a stable condensate The reversible flip from attraction to repulsion stems from quantum interference among wave like condensate atoms When the JILA team raised the magnetic field strength further the condensate suddenly reverted to attraction imploded and shrank beyond detection then exploded expelling about two thirds of its 10 000 atoms About half of the atoms in the condensate seemed to have disappeared from the experiment altogether not seen in the cold remnant or expanding gas cloud 30 Carl Wieman explained that under current atomic theory this characteristic of Bose Einstein condensate could not be explained because the energy state of an atom near absolute zero should not be enough to cause an implosion however subsequent mean field theories have been proposed to explain it Most likely they formed molecules of two rubidium atoms 48 energy gained by this bond imparts velocity sufficient to leave the trap without being detected The process of creation of molecular Bose condensate during the sweep of the magnetic field throughout the Feshbach resonance as well as the reverse process are described by the exactly solvable model that can explain many experimental observations 49 Current research editUnsolved problem in physics How do we rigorously prove the existence of Bose Einstein condensates for generally interacting systems more unsolved problems in physics Compared to more commonly encountered states of matter Bose Einstein condensates are extremely fragile 50 The slightest interaction with the external environment can be enough to warm them past the condensation threshold eliminating their interesting properties and forming a normal gas 51 Nevertheless they have proven useful in exploring a wide range of questions in fundamental physics and the years since the initial discoveries by the JILA and MIT groups have seen an increase in experimental and theoretical activity Examples include experiments that have demonstrated interference between condensates due to wave particle duality 52 the study of superfluidity and quantized vortices the creation of bright matter wave solitons from Bose condensates confined to one dimension and the slowing of light pulses to very low speeds using electromagnetically induced transparency 53 Vortices in Bose Einstein condensates are also currently the subject of analogue gravity research studying the possibility of modeling black holes and their related phenomena in such environments in the laboratory Experimenters have also realized optical lattices where the interference pattern from overlapping lasers provides a periodic potential These have been used to explore the transition between a superfluid and a Mott insulator 54 and may be useful in studying Bose Einstein condensation in fewer than three dimensions for example the Tonks Girardeau gas Further the sensitivity of the pinning transition of strongly interacting bosons confined in a shallow one dimensional optical lattice originally observed by Haller 55 has been explored via a tweaking of the primary optical lattice by a secondary weaker one 56 Thus for a resulting weak bichromatic optical lattice it has been found that the pinning transition is robust against the introduction of the weaker secondary optical lattice Studies of vortices in nonuniform Bose Einstein condensates 57 as well as excitations of these systems by the application of moving repulsive or attractive obstacles have also been undertaken 58 59 Within this context the conditions for order and chaos in the dynamics of a trapped Bose Einstein condensate have been explored by the application of moving blue and red detuned laser beams hitting frequencies slightly above and below the resonance frequency respectively via the time dependent Gross Pitaevskii equation 60 Bose Einstein condensates composed of a wide range of isotopes have been produced 61 Cooling fermions to extremely low temperatures has created degenerate gases subject to the Pauli exclusion principle To exhibit Bose Einstein condensation the fermions must pair up to form bosonic compound particles e g molecules or Cooper pairs The first molecular condensates were created in November 2003 by the groups of Rudolf Grimm at the University of Innsbruck Deborah S Jin at the University of Colorado at Boulder and Wolfgang Ketterle at MIT Jin quickly went on to create the first fermionic condensate working with the same system but outside the molecular regime 62 In 1999 Danish physicist Lene Hau led a team from Harvard University which slowed a beam of light to about 17 meters per second clarification needed using a superfluid 63 Hau and her associates have since made a group of condensate atoms recoil from a light pulse such that they recorded the light s phase and amplitude recovered by a second nearby condensate in what they term slow light mediated atomic matter wave amplification using Bose Einstein condensates 64 Another current research interest is the creation of Bose Einstein condensates in microgravity in order to use its properties for high precision atom interferometry The first demonstration of a BEC in weightlessness was achieved in 2008 at a drop tower in Bremen Germany by a consortium of researchers led by Ernst M Rasel from Leibniz University Hannover 65 The same team demonstrated in 2017 the first creation of a Bose Einstein condensate in space 66 and it is also the subject of two upcoming experiments on the International Space Station 67 68 Researchers in the new field of atomtronics use the properties of Bose Einstein condensates in the emerging quantum technology of matter wave circuits 69 70 In 1970 BECs were proposed by Emmanuel David Tannenbaum for anti stealth technology 71 In 2020 researchers reported the development of superconducting BEC and that there appears to be a smooth transition between BEC and Bardeen Cooper Shrieffer regimes 72 73 Continuous Bose Einstein condensation edit Limitations of evaporative cooling have restricted atomic BECs to pulsed operation involving a highly inefficient duty cycle that discards more than 99 of atoms to reach BEC Achieving continuous BEC has been a major open problem of experimental BEC research driven by the same motivations as continuous optical laser development high flux high coherence matter waves produced continuously would enable new sensing applications Continuous BEC was achieved for the first time in 2022 74 Dark matter edit P Sikivie and Q Yang showed that cold dark matter axions would form a Bose Einstein condensate by thermalisation because of gravitational self interactions 75 Axions have not yet been confirmed to exist However the important search for them has been greatly enhanced with the completion of upgrades to the Axion Dark Matter Experiment ADMX at the University of Washington in early 2018 In 2014 a potential dibaryon was detected at the Julich Research Center at about 2380 MeV The center claimed that the measurements confirm results from 2011 via a more replicable method 76 77 The particle existed for 10 23 seconds and was named d 2380 78 This particle is hypothesized to consist of three up and three down quarks 79 It is theorized that groups of d d stars could form Bose Einstein condensates due to prevailing low temperatures in the early universe and that BECs made of such hexaquarks with trapped electrons could behave like dark matter 80 81 82 Isotopes edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The effect has mainly been observed on alkaline atoms which have nuclear properties particularly suitable for working with traps As of 2012 using ultra low temperatures of 10 7 K displaystyle 10 7 K nbsp or below Bose Einstein condensates had been obtained for a multitude of isotopes mainly of alkali metal alkaline earth metal and lanthanide atoms 7 Li 23 Na 39 K 41 K 85 Rb 87 Rb 133 Cs 52 Cr 40 Ca 84 Sr 86 Sr 88 Sr 174 Yb 164 Dy and 168 Er Research was finally successful in hydrogen with the aid of the newly developed method of evaporative cooling 83 In contrast the superfluid state of 4 He below 2 17 K is not a good example because the interaction between the atoms is too strong Only 8 of atoms are in the ground state of the trap near absolute zero rather than the 100 of a true condensate 84 The bosonic behavior of some of these alkaline gases appears odd at first sight because their nuclei have half integer total spin It arises from a subtle interplay of electronic and nuclear spins at ultra low temperatures and corresponding excitation energies the half integer total spin of the electronic shell and half integer total spin of the nucleus are coupled by a very weak hyperfine interaction The total spin of the atom arising from this coupling is an integer lower value The chemistry of systems at room temperature is determined by the electronic properties which is essentially fermionic since room temperature thermal excitations have typical energies much higher than the hyperfine values In fiction editIn the 2016 film Spectral the US military battles mysterious enemy creatures fashioned out of Bose Einstein condensates 85 In the 2003 novel Blind Lake scientists observe sentient life on a planet 51 light years away using telescopes powered by Bose Einstein condensate based quantum computers The video game franchise Mass Effect has cryonic ammunition whose flavour text describes it as being filled with Bose Einstein condensates Upon impact the bullets rupture and spray super cold liquid on the enemy See also edit nbsp Physics portalAtom laser Atomic coherence Bose Einstein correlations Bose Einstein condensation a network theory approach Bose Einstein condensation of quasiparticles Bose Einstein statistics Cold Atom Laboratory Electromagnetically induced transparency Fermionic condensate Gas in a box Gross Pitaevskii equation Macroscopic quantum phenomena Macroscopic quantum self trapping Slow light Super heavy atom Superconductivity Superfluid film Superfluid helium 4 Supersolid Tachyon condensation Timeline of low temperature technology 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81 3811 S2CID 3174641 Bose Einstein Condensation in Alkali Gases PDF The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 2001 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2017 Stoferle Thilo 18 July 2017 The science of Spectral Is that really how Bose Einstein condensate behaves An actual Bose Einstein condensate scientist reviews Spectral s science Plus a response from the film s director Nic Mathieu Ars Technica Retrieved 4 June 2021 Further reading editS N Bose 1924 Plancks Gesetz und Lichtquantenhypothese Zeitschrift fur Physik 26 1 178 181 Bibcode 1924ZPhy 26 178B doi 10 1007 BF01327326 S2CID 186235974 A Einstein 1925 Quantentheorie des einatomigen idealen Gases Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1 3 L D Landau 1941 The theory of Superfluity of Helium 111 J Phys USSR 5 71 90 L D Landau 1941 Theory of the Superfluidity of Helium II Physical Review 60 4 356 358 Bibcode 1941PhRv 60 356L doi 10 1103 PhysRev 60 356 M H Anderson J R Ensher M R Matthews C E Wieman amp E A Cornell 1995 Observation of Bose Einstein Condensation in a Dilute Atomic Vapor Science 269 5221 198 201 Bibcode 1995Sci 269 198A doi 10 1126 science 269 5221 198 JSTOR 2888436 PMID 17789847 C Barcelo S Liberati amp M Visser 2001 Analogue gravity from Bose Einstein condensates Classical and Quantum Gravity 18 6 1137 1156 arXiv gr qc 0011026 Bibcode 2001CQGra 18 1137B doi 10 1088 0264 9381 18 6 312 S2CID 14811185 P G Kevrekidis R Carretero Gonzalez D J Frantzeskakis amp I G Kevrekidis 2004 Vortices in Bose Einstein Condensates Some Recent Developments Mod Phys Lett B 18 30 1481 1505 arXiv cond mat 0501030 Bibcode 2004MPLB 18 1481K doi 10 1142 S0217984904007967 S2CID 12111421 K B Davis M O Mewes M R Andrews N J van Druten D S Durfee D M Kurn amp W Ketterle 1995 Bose Einstein condensation in a gas of sodium atoms Phys Rev Lett 75 22 3969 3973 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 75 3969D doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 75 3969 PMID 10059782 S2CID 975895 Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 24 October 2017 D S Jin J R Ensher M R Matthews C E Wieman amp E A Cornell 1996 Collective Excitations of a Bose Einstein Condensate in a Dilute Gas Phys Rev Lett 77 3 420 423 Bibcode 1996PhRvL 77 420J doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 77 420 PMID 10062808 M R Andrews C G Townsend H J Miesner D S Durfee D M Kurn amp W Ketterle 1997 Observation of interference between two Bose condensates Science 275 5300 637 641 doi 10 1126 science 275 5300 637 PMID 9005843 S2CID 38284718 Archived from the original on 12 October 2000 Retrieved 26 October 2017 E A Cornell amp C E Wieman 1998 The Bose Einstein condensate Scientific American 278 3 40 45 Bibcode 1998SciAm 278c 40C doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0398 40 M R Matthews B P Anderson P C Haljan D S Hall C E Wieman amp E A Cornell 1999 Vortices in a Bose Einstein condensate Phys Rev Lett 83 13 2498 2501 arXiv cond mat 9908209 Bibcode 1999PhRvL 83 2498M doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 83 2498 S2CID 535347 E A Donley N R Claussen S L Cornish J L Roberts E A Cornell amp C E Wieman 2001 Dynamics of collapsing and exploding Bose Einstein condensates Nature 412 6844 295 299 arXiv cond mat 0105019 Bibcode 2001Natur 412 295D doi 10 1038 35085500 PMID 11460153 S2CID 969048 A G Truscott K E Strecker W I McAlexander G B Partridge amp R G Hulet 2001 Observation of Fermi Pressure in a Gas of Trapped Atoms Science 291 5513 2570 2572 Bibcode 2001Sci 291 2570T doi 10 1126 science 1059318 PMID 11283362 S2CID 31126288 M Greiner O Mandel T Esslinger T W Hansch amp I Bloch 2002 Quantum phase transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator in a gas of ultracold atoms Nature 415 6867 39 44 Bibcode 2002Natur 415 39G doi 10 1038 415039a PMID 11780110 S2CID 4411344 S Jochim M Bartenstein A Altmeyer G Hendl S Riedl C Chin J Hecker Denschlag amp R Grimm 2003 Bose Einstein Condensation of Molecules Science 302 5653 2101 2103 Bibcode 2003Sci 302 2101J doi 10 1126 science 1093280 PMID 14615548 S2CID 13041446 M Greiner C A Regal amp D S Jin 2003 Emergence of a molecular Bose Einstein condensate from a Fermi gas Nature 426 6966 537 540 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 537G doi 10 1038 nature02199 PMID 14647340 S2CID 4348155 M W Zwierlein C A Stan C H Schunck S M F Raupach S Gupta Z Hadzibabic amp W Ketterle 2003 Observation of Bose Einstein Condensation of Molecules Phys Rev Lett 91 25 250401 arXiv cond mat 0311617 Bibcode 2003PhRvL 91y0401Z doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 91 250401 PMID 14754098 S2CID 8342544 C A Regal M Greiner amp D S Jin 2004 Observation of Resonance Condensation of Fermionic Atom Pairs Phys Rev Lett 92 4 040403 arXiv cond mat 0401554 Bibcode 2004PhRvL 92d0403R doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 92 040403 PMID 14995356 S2CID 10799388 C J Pethick and H Smith Bose Einstein Condensation in Dilute Gases Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2001 Lev P Pitaevskii and S Stringari Bose Einstein Condensation Clarendon Press Oxford 2003 M Mackie K A Suominen amp J Javanainen 2002 Mean field theory of Feshbach resonant interactions in 85Rb condensates Phys Rev Lett 89 18 180403 arXiv cond mat 0205535 Bibcode 2002PhRvL 89r0403M doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 89 180403 PMID 12398586 S2CID 40421182 Monique Combescot and Shiue Yuan Shiau Excitons and Cooper Pairs Two Composite Bosons in Many Body Physics Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198753735 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Bose Einstein condensate nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bose Einstein condensate Bose Einstein Condensation 2009 Conference Frontiers in Quantum Gases BEC Homepage General introduction to Bose Einstein condensation Nobel Prize in Physics 2001 for the achievement of Bose Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates Levi Barbara G 2001 Cornell Ketterle and Wieman Share Nobel Prize for Bose Einstein Condensates Physics Today 54 12 14 16 Bibcode 2001PhT 54l 14L doi 10 1063 1 1445529 Bose Einstein condensates at JILA Atomcool at Rice University Alkali Quantum Gases at MIT Atom Optics at UQ Einstein s manuscript on the Bose Einstein condensate discovered at Leiden University Bose Einstein condensate on arxiv org Bosons The Birds That Flock and Sing Together Easy BEC machine information on constructing a Bose Einstein condensate machine Verging on absolute zero Cosmos Online Archived 22 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine Lecture by W Ketterle at MIT in 2001 Bose Einstein Condensation at NIST NIST resource on BEC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bose Einstein condensate amp oldid 1180004714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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