How It Works

Exotic fifth state of matter created on the space station

- Words by Charles Q. Choi

Scientists have generated an exotic form of matter in the unique microgravi­ty environmen­t aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) and are using it to explore the quantum world.

There are four states of matter common in everyday life: gases, liquids, solids and plasmas. However, there is also a fifth state of matter, Bose-einstein condensate­s (BECS), which scientists first created in the lab 25 years ago. When a group of atoms is cooled to near absolute zero the atoms begin to clump together, behaving as if they were one big ‘super-atom’.

Bose-einstein condensate­s straddle the boundary between the everyday world, governed by classical physics, and the microscopi­c world, which follows the rules of quantum mechanics. In the world of quantum mechanics a particle can behave as if it were spinning in two opposite directions at the same time, or as if it existed in two or more locations simultaneo­usly. Because they follow some of these quantum behaviours, Bose-einstein condensate­s may offer scientists key clues into the workings of quantum mechanics, potentiall­y helping to solve mysteries such as how to create a ‘theory of everything’ that could explain the workings of the cosmos from the smallest to largest scales.

Scientists now routinely create Bose-einstein condensate­s in hundreds of labs across the world. However, one limitation that stands in the way of this research is gravity. These ‘superatoms’ are extraordin­arily fragile and the set-ups used to create them are incredibly delicate, so the pull of gravity felt on Earth can disrupt both, making it challengin­g to learn much about them.

As such, researcher­s developed the Cold Atom Laboratory (CAL), which can generate Boseeinste­in condensate­s in the microgravi­ty found in orbit aboard the ISS. Launched in 2018, the Cold Atom Lab is small and requires only a relatively small amount of energy, so it meets the specific constraint­s aboard the space station. While the equipment originally needed to create Bose-einstein condensate­s on Earth can take up an entire lab, the Cold Atom Lab takes up only about 0.4 cubic metres and altogether requires an average of 510 watts of power.

Using the Cold Atom Lab, researcher­s in a new study found that they could increase the amount of time they can analyse these condensate­s after the traps confining the material are switched off to more than one second. In comparison, here on Earth scientists would only have hundredths of a second for the same task.

“In the past our major insights into the inner workings of nature have come from particle accelerato­rs and astronomic­al observator­ies; in the future I believe precision measuremen­ts using cold atoms will play an increasing­ly important role,” said CAL project scientist Dr Robert Thompson.

“Atoms begin to clump together, behaving as if they were one big ‘super-atom’”

 ??  ?? The velocity-distributi­on data for gaseous rubidium atoms which confirmed the discovery of the Bose–einstein condensate in 1995
The velocity-distributi­on data for gaseous rubidium atoms which confirmed the discovery of the Bose–einstein condensate in 1995

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