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Hanns-Christoph Naegerl's research group has investigated how ultracold quantum
gases behave in lower spatial dimensions. They successfully realized an exotic
state, where, due to the laws of quantum mechanics, atoms align along a one-dimensional
structure. A stable many-body phase with new quantum mechanical states is thereby
produced even though the atoms are usually strongly attracted which would cause
the system to collapse. The scientists report on their findings in the leading
scientific journal Science.
Interactions are considerably more drastic in low-dimensional systems than
in three-dimensional ones. Thus, physicists take a special interest in these
systems. In physics zero-dimensional quantum dots, two-dimensional quantum wells
and also one-dimensional quantum wires are known. The latter are spatial potential
structures, where carriers can move only one-dimensionally. Whereas quantum
dots and wells can be realized and analyzed relatively easily, it is much harder
to investigate quantum wires in solid-state bodies. Hanns-Christoph Naegerl's
research group of the Institute for Experimental Physics of the University
of Innsbruck has now tried something totally different: In a cloud of ultracold
atoms they realized one-dimensional structures and thoroughly analyzed their
properties.
Surprising observation
In a vacuum chamber the physicists produced a Bose-Einstein condensate with
approx. 40,000 ultracold cesium atoms. With two laser beams they generated an
optical lattice, where the atoms were confined to vertical one-dimensional structures
with up to 15 atoms aligned in each tube. The laser beams prevent the atoms
from breaking ranks or changing place with each other. Using a magnetic field,
the scientists could tune the interaction between the atoms: "By increasing
the interaction energy between the atoms (attraction interaction), the atoms
start coming together and the structure quickly decays," Naegerl explains
what is called among experts the „Bosenova" effect. „By minimizing
the interaction energy, the atoms repel each other (repulsive interaction),
align vertically and regularly along a one-dimensional structure and the system
is stable." If the interactions are switched from strongly repulsive to
strongly attractive, a surprising effect can be observed. „We thereby
achieve an exotic, gas-like phase, where the atoms are excited and correlated
but do not come together and a ,Bosenova' effect is absent," Naegerl says.
The phase was diagnosed by compressing the quantum gas and measuring its stiffness.
„However, this excited many-body phase can only be realized by a detour
via repulsive interaction. This phase was predicted four years ago and we have
now been able to realize it experimentally for the first time," an excited
Elmar Haller says. He is first author of the research paper, which is now published
in the renowned scientific journal Science. Currently, research on low-dimensional
structures receives a lot of attention internationally and it may help to better
understand the functioning of high-temperature superconductors.
Cold atoms as an ideal field of experimentation
„Ultracold quantum gases offer a big advantage: They can be isolated
against the environment quite well," Naegerl explains. „Moreover,
in our experiment we can practically rule out defects we often find in solid-state
bodies." With this successful experiment the Innsbruck quantum physicists
found an ideal experimental setup to further study the properties of quantum
wires. Naegerl's team of scientists clearly benefits from the long standing
and successful research on ultracold atoms and molecules by another Innsbruck
group of physicists: the research group led by Wittgenstein laureate Prof. Rudolf
Grimm, which has already assumed a leading role internationally. In addition
to producing the first Bose-Einstein condensates using cesium atoms and molecules,
the scientists also observed exotic states such as the Efimov-state and repulsive
quantum pairs experimentally for the first time worldwide. „The research
work of Hanns-Christoph Naegerl and his team once more underlines the international
significance of our research projects," Rudolf Grimm says. The experimental
physicists of the research project on quantum wires also benefited from a very
close cooperation with the theoretical physicists of the quantum physics stronghold
in Innsbruck. The project of START-awardee Hanns-Christoph Naegerl is funded
by the Austrian Science Funds and the European Union.
Posted September 3rd, 2009
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