Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




TIME AND SPACE
Exotic particles, chilled and trapped, form giant matter wave
by Staff Writers
San Diego CA (SPX) May 29, 2012


As excitons cool to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero, they condense at the bottom of an electrostatic trap and spontaneously form coherent matter waves. Creating indirect excitons, with electrons and holes in separate layers of a semiconductor, allowed them to persist long enough to cool into this state. Credit: Butov group/UCSD.

Physicists have trapped and cooled exotic particles called excitons so effectively that they condensed and cohered to form a giant matter wave. This feat will allow scientists to better study the physical properties of excitons, which exist only fleetingly yet offer promising applications as diverse as efficient harvesting of solar energy and ultrafast computing.

"The realization of the exciton condensate in a trap opens the opportunity to study this interesting state. Traps allow control of the condensate, providing a new way to study fundamental properties of light and matter," said Leonid Butov, professor of physics at the University of California, San Diego.

A paper reporting his team's success was recently published in the scientific journal Nano Letters.

Excitons are composite particles made up of an electron and a "hole" left by a missing electron in a semiconductor. Created by light, these coupled pairs exist in nature. The formation and dynamics of excitons play a critical role in photosynthesis, for example.

Like other matter, excitons have a dual nature of both particle and wave, in a quantum mechanical view. The waves are usually unsynchronized, but when particles are cooled enough to condense, their waves synchronize and combine to form a giant matter wave, a state that others have observed for atoms.

Scientists can easily create excitons by shining light on a semiconductor, but in order for the excitons to condense they must be chilled before they recombine.

The key to the team's success was to separate the electrons far enough from their holes so that excitons could last long enough for the scientists to cool them into a condensate. They accomplished this by creating structures called "coupled quantum wells" that separate electrons from holes in different layers of alloys made of gallium, arsenic and aluminum.

Then they set an electrostatic trap made by a diamond-shaped electrode and chilled their special semiconducting material in an optical dilution refrigerator to as cold as 50 milli-Kelvin, just a fraction of a degree above absolute zero.

A laser focused on the surface of the material created excitons, which began to accumulate at the bottom of the trap as they cooled. Below 1 Kelvin, the entire cloud of excitons cohered to form a single matter wave, a signature of a state called a Bose-Einstein condensate.

Other scientists have seen whole atoms do this when confined in a trap and cooled, but this is the first time that scientists have seen subatomic particles form coherent matter waves in a trap.

Varying the size and depth of the trap will alter the coherent exciton state, providing this team, and others, the opportunity to study the properties of light and mater in a new way.

.


Related Links
University of California - San Diego
Understanding Time and Space






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TIME AND SPACE
Elusive quasiparticles realized
Innsbruck, Austria (SPX) May 24, 2012
Ultracold quantum gases are an ideal experimental model system to simulate physical phenomena in condensed matter. In these gases, many-body states can be realized under highly controlled conditions and interactions between particles are highly tuneable. A research group led by Wittgenstein awardee Rudolf Grimm and START awardee Florian Schreck have now realized and comprehensively analyzed repu ... read more


TIME AND SPACE
Samsung releases Chrome desktop computer

Japan firm unveils radiation-gauging smartphone

NTU and I2R scientists invent revolutionary chipset for high-speed wireless data transfer

Global mobile payments to top $171 bn: survey

TIME AND SPACE
Researchers Improve Fast-Moving Mobile Networks

Second AEHF Military Communications Satellite Launched

Fourth Boeing-built WGS Satellite Accepted by USAF

Raytheon to Continue Supporting Coalition Forces' Information-Sharing Computer Network

TIME AND SPACE
Ariane 5 booster roars into life

Sea Launch Prepares for the Launch of Intelsat-19

SpaceX capsule has 'new car' smell, astronauts say

SpaceX makes final approach to space station

TIME AND SPACE
TomTom eyes expanding S. American market

Spirent Launches New Entry-Level Multi-GNSS Simulator

Beidou navigation system installed on more Chinese fishing boats

Scientists design indoor navigation system for blind

TIME AND SPACE
EADS head says helicopter cracks not comparable to A380 woes

India may bar Europe carriers in climate tax row

Boeing to Modernize Flight Deck and Avionics for US and NATO AWACS Fleets

Northrop Grumman's Joint STARS Completes Flight Testing of JT-8D Engines

TIME AND SPACE
Japan's Renesas ups chip outsourcing to Taiwan giant

New silicon memory chip developed

Return of the vacuum tube

Performance boost for microchips

TIME AND SPACE
Satellite maps ocean floor

Nea Kameni volcano movement captured by Envisat

My American Landscape Contest: A Space Chronicle of Change

City's population is counted from space

TIME AND SPACE
Fears as Latin America's largest trash dump closes

Ship's captain jailed over New Zealand oil spill

Germany, India in talks over treating Bhopal waste

Italy ditches plan for rubbish dump near Hadrian's villa




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement