It has long been predicted that the scattering of ultracold atoms can be altered significantly through a so-called 'Feshbach resonance'. Two such resonances have now been observed in optically trapped Bose-Einstein condensates of sodium atoms by varying an external magnetic field. They gave rise to enhanced inelastic processes and a dispersive variation of the scattering length by a factor of over ten. These resonances open new possibilities for the study and manipulation of Bose-Einstein condensates.Bose-Einstein condensates of atomic gases offer new opportunities for studying quantum-degenerate fluids 1-5 . All the essential properties of Bose condensed systems-the formation and shape of the condensate, the nature of its collective excitations and statistical fluctuations, and the formation and dynamics of solitons and vortices-are determined by the strength of the atomic interactions. In contrast to the situation for superfluid helium, these interactions are weak, allowing the phenomena to be theoretically described from 'first principles'. Furthermore, in atomic gases the interactions can be altered, for instance by employing different species, changing the atomic density, or, as in the present work, merely by varying a magnetic field.At low temperatures, the interaction energy in a cloud of atoms is proportional to the density and a single atomic parameter, the scattering length a which depends on the quantum-mechanical phase shift in an elastic collision. It has been predicted that the scattering length can be modified by applying external magnetic 6-10 , optical 11,12 or radio-frequency 13 (r.f.) fields. Those modifications are only pronounced in a so-called ''Feshbach resonance'' 14 , when a quasibound molecular state has nearly zero energy and couples resonantly to the free state of the colliding atoms. In a timedependent picture, the two atoms are transferred to the quasibound state, 'stick' together and then return to an unbound state. Such a resonance strongly affects the scattering length (elastic channel), but also affects inelastic processes such as dipolar relaxation 6,7 and threebody recombination. Feshbach resonances have so far been studied at much higher energies 15 by varying the collision energy, but here we show that they can be 'tuned' to zero energy to be resonant for ultracold atoms. The different magnetic moments of the free and quasibound states allowed us to tune these resonances with magnetic fields, and as a result, minute changes in the magnetic field strongly affected the properties of a macroscopic system.Above and below a Feshbach resonance, the scattering length a covers the full continuum of positive and negative values. This should allow the realization of condensates over a wide range of interaction strengths. By setting a Ϸ 0, one can create a condensate with essentially non-interacting atoms, and by setting a Ͻ 0 one can make the system unstable and observe its collapse. Rapid tuning of an external magnetic field around a Feshbach resonance will lead to sudden changes of t...
Quantized vortices play a key role in superfluidity and superconductivity. We have observed the formation of highly ordered vortex lattices in a rotating Bose-condensed gas. These triangular lattices contained over 100 vortices with lifetimes of several seconds. Individual vortices persisted up to 40 seconds. The lattices could be generated over a wide range of rotation frequencies and trap geometries, shedding light on the formation process. Our observation of dislocations, irregular structure, and dynamics indicates that gaseous Bose-Einstein condensates may be a model system for the study of vortex matter.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.