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Physicists create first-ever Bose-Einstein condensate made of molecules
The ultracold, exotic form of matter had previously been achieved only with atoms of a single element, such as rubidium
A team of physicists has successfully created a unique quantum state of matter called a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) out of molecules. The team is led by Sebastian Will at Columbia University, who received a U.S. National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development award to support his research. The findings were published in the journal Nature.
While BECs have previously been achieved with atoms of a single element, this is the first creation of a molecular BEC. Its greater period of stability will allow scientists to test longstanding theories in quantum phenomena, including superconductivity, superfluidity and more. Molecular BECs also hold the potential to outperform single-element BECs by creating longer-ranging interactions in quantum simulators, allowing for more complicated models.
Credit: Sebastian Will/ Will Lab/ Columbia University
In the vacuum chamber at Columbia University’s Will Lab, shown here, ultracold gases of dipolar sodium-cesium molecules are made using a combination of laser cooling and magnetic manipulations. Researchers in the lab created the first-ever Bose-Einstein condensate made from molecules, which was cooled to just 5 nanoKelvin, or about 459.66 degrees Fahrenheit, and stable for the strikingly-long period of two seconds
Predicted in the 1920s by Albert Einstein and Satyendra Nath Bose, BECs were first achieved in laboratories in the 1990s. All BECs require ultracold conditions and are neither gas, liquid nor solid, but rather a unique state of matter in which a group of particles cooled to a near standstill merge into a single, larger entity with shared properties and behaviors dictated by the laws of quantum mechanics. Most experiments using BECs take place within a second — some as short as a few milliseconds — but Will's molecular BEC, made from sodium-cesium molecules, remains stable for upwards of two seconds, a duration that will allow for dozens of theoretical predictions to be tested.
Single-element BECs have expanded the understanding of concepts such as the wave nature of matter and led to the development of technologies such as quantum gas microscopes and quantum simulators.
Researchers plan to use molecular BECs to explore more quantum phenomena, including new types of superfluidity, a state of matter that flows without experiencing any friction. They also hope to use their molecular BEC-based quantum simulator to help guide the development of new quantum materials.
Credit: Sebastian Will/ Will Lab/ Columbia University
The members of the BEC team at Columbia, from left to right: associate research scientist Ian Stevenson, doctoral student Niccolò Bigagli, doctoral student Weijun Yuan, undergraduate student Boris Bulatovic, doctoral student Siwei Zhang, and principal investigator Sebastian Will.
This article was originally published by Columbia News. It has been edited for length and style.