MIT Researchers Create New Form of Matter
Supersolid is crystalline and superfluid at the same time.
Supersolid is crystalline and superfluid at the same time.
March 6, 2017 – MIT physicists have
created a new form of matter, a supersolid, which combines the properties of
solids with those of superfluids.
By using lasers
to manipulate a superfluid gas known as a Bose-Einstein condensate, the team
was able to coax the condensate into a quantum
phase of matter that has a rigid structure — like a solid — and can flow
without viscosity — a key characteristic of a superfluid. Studies into this
apparently contradictory phase of matter could yield deeper insights into
superfluids and superconductors, which are important for improvements in
technologies such as superconducting
magnets
and sensors, as well as efficient energy transport. The researchers
report their results this week in the journal Nature.
“It is
counterintuitive to have a material
which combines superfluidity and solidity,” says team leader Wolfgang Ketterle,
the John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics at MIT.
“If your coffee was superfluid and you stirred it, it would continue to spin
around forever.”
Physicists had
predicted the possibility of supersolids but had not observed them in the lab.
They theorized that solid helium
could become superfluid if helium
atoms
could move around in a solid crystal
of helium, effectively becoming a supersolid. However, the experimental proof
remained elusive.
The team used
a combination of laser cooling and evaporative cooling methods, originally
co-developed by Ketterle, to cool atoms
of sodium to nanokelvin temperatures. Atoms of sodium are known as bosons, for
their even number of nucleons and electrons.
When cooled to near absolute zero, bosons form a superfluid state of dilute
gas, called a Bose-Einstein condensate, or BEC.
Ketterle
co-discovered BECs — a discovery for which he was recognized with the 2001 Nobel
Prize in physics.
“The challenge
was now to add something to the BEC to make sure it developed a shape or form
beyond the shape of the ‘atom trap,’ which is the defining characteristic of a
solid,” explains Ketterle.
Flipping
the spin, finding the stripes
To create the
supersolid state, the team manipulated the motion of the atoms of the BEC using
laser beams, introducing “spin-orbit
coupling.”
In their ultrahigh-vacuum
chamber, the team used an initial set of lasers
to convert half of the condensate’s atoms to a different quantum
state, or spin, essentially creating a mixture of two Bose-Einstein
condensates. Additional laser beams then transferred atoms between the two
condensates, called a “spin flip.”
“These extra
lasers gave the ‘spin-flipped’ atoms an extra kick to realize the spin-orbit
coupling,” Ketterle says.
Physicists had
predicted that a spin-orbit coupled Bose-Einstein condensate would be a
supersolid due to a spontaneous “density modulation.” Like a crystalline solid,
the density of a supersolid is no longer constant and instead has a ripple or
wave-like pattern called the “stripe phase.”
“The hardest
part was to observe this density modulation,” says Junru Li, an MIT graduate
student who worked on the discovery. This observation was accomplished with
another laser, the beam of which was diffracted by the density modulation. “The
recipe for the supersolid is really simple,” Li adds, “but it was a big
challenge to precisely align all the laser beams and to get everything stable
to observe the stripe phase.”
Mapping
out what is possible in nature
Currently, the
supersolid only exists at extremely low temperatures under ultrahigh-vacuum
conditions. Going forward, the team plans to carry out further experiments
on supersolids and spin-orbit coupling, characterizing and understanding the
properties of the new form of matter they created.
“With our cold
atoms, we are mapping out what is possible in nature,” explains Ketterle. “Now
that we have experimentally proven that the theories predicting supersolids are
correct, we hope to inspire further research, possibly with unanticipated
results.”
Several
research groups were working on realizing the first supersolid. In the same issue ofNature, a group in Switzerland
reported an alternative way of turning a Bose-Einstein condensate into a
supersolid with the help of mirrors,
which collected laser light scattering by the atoms. “The simultaneous
realization by two groups shows how big the interest is in this new form of
matter,” says Ketterle.
Ketterle’s
team members include graduate students Junru Li, Boris Shteynas, Furkan Çağrı
Top, and Wujie Huang; undergraduate Sean Burchesky; and postdocs Jeongwon Lee
and Alan O. Jamison, all of whom are associates at MIT’s Research
Laboratory of Electronics.
http://www.scienceandtechnologyresearchnews.com/mit-researchers-create-new-form-matter/
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