Physics World 2024年11月11日
Quantized vortices seen in a supersolid for the first time
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

科学家首次在超固体中观测到量子涡旋,这进一步证实了超固体可以被建模为具有晶体结构的超流体。超流体是一种能够无摩擦流动的神奇物质状态,而超固体则同时具备晶体有序和超流体特性。研究人员利用磁搅拌技术,使钬-164原子玻色-爱因斯坦凝聚体旋转,观察到涡旋形成并迁移到密度最小处。这一发现可能应用于中子星等领域,例如解释脉冲星的旋转速度突然加快现象(故障)。超固体中量子涡旋的发现为研究非平衡动力学、湍流等领域提供了新的平台。

🤔**首次在超固体中观测到量子涡旋:**奥地利的研究人员首次在超固体中观察到量子涡旋,这是超固体的重要特征,也进一步证实了超固体可以被建模为具有晶体结构的超流体。

🔄**超流体的无摩擦流动特性:**超流体是一种能够无摩擦流动的物质状态,例如氦-4、第二类超导体和玻色-爱因斯坦凝聚体等。

🌀**涡旋形成与迁移:**研究人员通过旋转磁场使钬-164原子玻色-爱因斯坦凝聚体旋转,观察到涡旋形成并迁移到密度最小处,因为在密度最小处形成涡旋的能量成本更低。

🌟**潜在应用于中子星研究:**研究人员认为,这一发现可能应用于中子星等领域,例如解释脉冲星的旋转速度突然加快现象(故障),这可能是由于涡旋从超固体中脱落并撞击固体外层导致的。

💡**开启新的研究领域:**超固体中量子涡旋的发现为研究非平衡动力学、湍流等领域提供了新的平台,为探索奇异材料和拓扑缺陷提供了新的途径。

Quantized vortices – one of the defining features of superfluidity – have been seen in a supersolid for the first time. Observed by researchers in Austria, these vortices provide further confirmation that supersolids can be modelled as superfluids with a crystalline structure. This model could have variety of other applications in quantum many body physics and Austrian team now using it to study pulsars, which are rotating and magnetized neutron stars.

A superfluid is a curious state of matter that can flow without any friction. Superfluid systems that have been studied in the lab include helium-4; type-II superconductors; and Bose–Einstein condensates (BECs) – all of which exist at very low temperatures.

More than five decades ago, physicists suggested that some systems could exhibit crystalline order and superfluidity simultaneously in a unique state of matter called a supersolid. In such a state, the atoms would be described by the same wavefunction and are therefore delocalized across the entire crystal lattice. The order of the supersolid would therefore be defined by the nodes and antinodes of this wavefunction.

In 2004, Moses Chan of the Pennsylvania State University in the US and his PhD student Eun-Seong Kim reported observing a supersolid phase in superfluid helium-4. However, Chan and others have not been able to reproduce this result. Subsequently, researchers including Giovanni Modugno at Italy’s University of Pisa and Francesca Ferlaino at the University of Innsbruck in Austria have demonstrated evidence of supersolidity in BECs of magnetic atoms.

Irrotational behaviour

But until now, no-one had observed an important aspect of superfluidity in a supersolid: that a superfluid never carries bulk angular momentum. If a superfluid is placed in a container and the container is rotated at moderate angular velocity, it simply flows freely against the edges. As the angular momentum of the container increases, however, it becomes energetically costly to maintain the decoupling between the container and the superfluid. “Still, globally, the system is irrotational,” says Ferlaino; “So there’s really a necessity for the superfluid to heal itself from rotation.”

In a normal superfluid, this “healing” occurs by the formation of small, quantized vortices that dissipate the angular momentum, allowing the system to remain globally irrotational. “In an ordinary superfluid that’s not modulated in space [the vortices] form a kind of triangular structure called an Abrikosov lattice, because that’s the structure that minimizes their energy,” explains Ferlaino. It was unclear how the vortices might sit inside a supersolid lattice.

In the new work, Ferlaino and colleagues at the University of Innsbruck utilized a technique called magnetostirring to rotate a BEC of magnetic dysprosium-164 atoms. They caused the atoms to rotate simply by rotating the magnetic field. “That’s the beauty: it’s so simple but nobody had thought about this before,” says Ferlaino.

As the group increased the field’s rotation rate, they observed vortices forming in the condensate and migrating to the density minima. “Vortices are zeroes of density, so there it costs less energy to drill a hole than in a density peak,” says Ferlaino; “The order that the vortices assume is largely imparted by the crystalline structure – although their distance is dependent on the repulsion between vortices.”

Unexpected applications

The researchers believe the findings could be applicable in some unexpected areas of physics. Ferlaino tells of hearing a talk about the interior composition of neutron stars by the theoretical astrophysicist Massimo Mannarelli of Gran Sasso Laboratory in Italy. “During the coffee break I went to speak to him and we’ve started to work together.”

“A large part of the astrophysical community is convinced that the core of a neutron star is a superfluid,” Ferlaino says; “The crust is a solid, the core is a superfluid, and a layer called the inner crust has both properties together.” Pulsars are neutron stars that emit radiation in a narrow beam, giving them a well-defined pulse rate that depends on their rotation. As they lose energy through radiation emission, they gradually slow down.

Occasionally, however, their rotation rates suddenly speed up again in events called glitches. The researchers’ theoretical models suggest that the glitches could be caused by vortices unpinning from the supersolid and crashing into the solid exterior, imparting extra angular momentum. “When we impose a rotation on our supersolid that slows down, then at some point the vortices unpin and we see the glitches in the rotational frequency,” Ferlaino says. “This is a new direction – I don’t know where it will bring us, but for sure experimentally observing vortices was the first step.”

Theorist Blair Blakie of the University of Otago in New Zealand is excited by the research. “Vortices in supersolids were a bit of a curiosity in early theories, and sometimes you’re not sure whether theorists are just being a bit crazy considering things, but now they’re here,” he says. “It opens this new landscape for studying things from non-equilibrium dynamics to turbulence – all sorts of things where you’ve got this exotic material with topological defects in it. It’s very hard to predict what the killer application will be, but in these fields people love new systems with new properties.”

The research is described in Nature.

The post Quantized vortices seen in a supersolid for the first time appeared first on Physics World.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

超固体 量子涡旋 超流体 玻色-爱因斯坦凝聚体 中子星
相关文章