When the other half gets really cold.In 1995, physicists showed that chilling wispy gases to nearly absolute zero can yield remarkable effects. If the gas atoms are of the type known as bosons, a cloud of them can snap into a single quantum mechanical state, forming a Bose-Einstein condensate (SN: 7/15/95, p. 36). Only about half the atoms in the universe, however, are bosons. Now, physicists in Colorado at the same institute that made the first Bose-Einstein condensate report cooling a dilute cloud of the other type of atoms, known as fermions, to extraordinarily low temperatures. In that frigid condition, the atoms behave in a way that only quantum mechanics can explain. "That's exciting because there are all kinds of neat stuff we can do with ultra-cold fermions," comments Randall Hulet of Rice University in Houston. Whereas bosons coalesce into a condensate of atoms that are all at the same energy level, fermions form a so-called Fermi sea, in which each atom occupies a different rung on the energy ladder. That sea is so dilute that room air is about 10 million times as dense. Fermions obey a rule of quantum mechanics known as the Pauli exclusion principle Pauli exclusion principle Assertion proposed by Wolfgang Pauli that no two electrons in an atom can be in the same state or configuration at the same time. It accounts for the observed patterns of light emission from atoms. . It forbids identical fermions to occupy the same energy level. As Daniel Kleppner of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, puts it, "Bosons love to come together; fermions can't stand each other." That exclusivity helps prevent electrons, protons, and neutrons, which are all fermions, from coalescing. The enforced separateness of fermions accounts for the stability of all materials. It also explains the order of the periodic table of elements, the pressure that stops neutron stars from collapsing, and countless other phenomena, says Brian DeMarco of JILA JILA Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (Space) , a joint institute of the National Institute of Standards and Technology National Institute of Standards and Technology, governmental agency within the U.S. Dept. of Commerce with the mission of "working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements, and standards" in the national interest. (NIST (National Institute of Standards & Technology, Washington, DC, www.nist.gov) The standards-defining agency of the U.S. government, formerly the National Bureau of Standards. It is one of three agencies that fall under the Technology Administration (www.technology. ) and the University of Colorado University of Colorado may refer to:
In the past, researchers have observed Fermi seas in other forms of matter, such as free electrons in a metal and a solution of superfluid su·per·flu·id n. A fluid, such as a liquid form of helium, exhibiting a frictionless flow at temperatures close to absolute zero. su helium-3 dissolved in helium-4 liquid. The new results provide "the first evidence of the quantum mechanics of fermions in a real, honest-to-goodness gas," says DeMarco. He and Deborah S. Jin Deborah S. Jin (born 1968) is a physicist with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST); Assistant Professor Adjoint, Department of Physics at the University of Colorado; a fellow of the JILA, a NIST joint laboratory with the University of Colorado. In 2003, Dr. , also of JILA, describe the findings in the Sept. 10 SCIENCE. Kleppner says the new work is "a beautiful experiment and very clever." Although Hulet finds the progress in fermion fermion (fûr`mēŏn'): see elementary particles; exclusion principle; Fermi-Dirac statistics. fermion Any of a group of subatomic particles having odd half-integral spin (¹⁄₂, cooling encouraging because "it shows that some of the techniques will work," he says that the experiment uncovers no new physics. Researchers will have to drive the temperature down much lower to observe novel phenomena, he says. At around 30 nanokelvins, for instance, pairs of fermions in the gas behave as single bosons. Study of such Cooper pairs could shed light on superconductivity superconductivity, abnormally high electrical conductivity of certain substances. The phenomenon was discovered in 1911 by Kamerlingh Onnes, who found that the resistance of mercury dropped suddenly to zero at a temperature of about 4.2°K;. , he suggests. In their experiments at JILA, DeMarco and Jin magnetically trapped batches of about 100 million atoms of potassium-40. Their method of reducing the temperature resembles the cooling of a cup of coffee. They forced the most energetic atoms to evaporate. That left the rest to redistribute energy via collisions and thus lower their average energy and temperature. As temperatures dipped below 300 nanokelvins, measurements of gas energy showed that "there was more than you would expect classically because the atoms couldn't [all] go to the lowest energy levels," DeMarco says. Working with identical fermions is tricky because their solitary nature nixes certain types of collisions. The team had to mix potassium-40 atoms differing in a trait called spin to get enough collisions to chill the gas. Meanwhile, Hulet blends fermions with bosons in his experiments. |
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