A Bose-Einstein condensate is a strange form of matter in which extremely cold atoms demonstrate collective behavior and act like a single "super atom." The Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is one of the five primary states of matter. In it, atoms reach such low energies that the rules of quantum mechanics dictate that they stop acting as individual atoms and behave like a single "super atom." A Bose-Einstein condensate forms only when materials are cooled to within a hair of absolute zero. At that temperature the atoms are hardly moving relative to each other; they have almost no free energy to do so. The atoms then begin to clump together, and enter the same energy states. They become identical, from a physical point of view, and the whole group starts behaving as though it were a single atom. Gases, liquids, solids and plasmas have been studied for decades, if not centuries, but Bose-Einstein condensates weren't created in the laboratory until the 1990s. To make a Bose-Einstein condensate, you start with a cloud of diffuse gas. Many experiments start with atoms of rubidium. Then you cool it with lasers, using the beams to take energy away from the atoms. After that, to cool them further, scientists use evaporative cooling. "With a [Bose-Einstein condensate], you start from a disordered state, where kinetic energy is greater than potential energy," Xuedong Hu, a professor of physics at the University at Buffalo, told Live Science. "You cool it down, but it doesn't form a lattice like a solid." Instead, the atoms fall into the same quantum states, and can't be distinguished from one another. At that point the atoms start obeying what are called Bose-Einstein statistics, which are usually applied to particles you can't tell apart, such as photons, or light packets.
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By Sam Lemonick, March 29, 2024, LiveScience.com More than two decades ago, scientists predicted that at ultra-low temperatures, many atoms could undergo 'quantum superchemistry' and chemically react as one. They've finally shown it's real.
And it was finally demonstrated last year, more than 20 years after physicists first proposed it.
In that experiment, University of Chicago physicist Cheng Chin and colleagues coaxed a group of cesium atoms at just a few nanokelvin into the same quantum state. Amazingly, each atom did not interact separately. Instead, 100,000 atoms reacted as one, almost instantaneously. The first demonstration of this weird process has opened a window for scientists to better understand how chemical reactions operate in the strange realm of quantum mechanics, which governs the behavior of subatomic particles. It also may help to simulate quantum phenomena that classic computers struggle to model accurately, such as superconductivity. But what happens after that, as with so many advances in research, is hard to predict. Chin, for one, has no plans to stop studying this strange form of chemistry |
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