-
The coldest materials in the world
aren’t in Antarctica.
-
They’re not at the top of Mount Everest
-
or buried in a glacier.
-
They’re in physics labs:
-
clouds of gases held just fractions
of a degree above absolute zero.
-
That’s 395 million times colder
than your refrigerator,
-
100 million times colder
than liquid nitrogen,
-
and 4 million times colder
than outer space.
-
Temperatures this low give scientists a
window into the inner workings of matter,
-
and allow engineers to build
incredibly sensitive instruments
-
that tell us more about everything
-
from our exact position on the planet
-
to what’s happening in
the farthest reaches of the universe.
-
How do we create such
extreme temperatures?
-
In short, by slowing down
moving particles.
-
When we’re talking about temperature,
what we’re really talking about is motion.
-
The atoms that make up solids,
-
liquids,
-
and gases
-
are moving all the time.
-
When atoms are moving more rapidly,
we perceive that matter as hot.
-
When they’re moving more
slowly, we perceive it as cold.
-
To make a hot object
or gas cold in everyday life,
-
we place it in a colder environment,
like a refrigerator.
-
Some of the atomic motion in the hot
object is transferred to the surroundings,
-
and it cools down.
-
But there’s a limit to this:
-
even outer space is too warm
to create ultra-low temperatures.
-
So instead, scientists figured out a way
to slow the atoms down directly –
-
with a laser beam.
-
Under most circumstances,
-
the energy in a laser beam
heats things up.
-
But used in a very precise way,
-
the beam’s momentum can stall
moving atoms, cooling them down.
-
That’s what happens in a device
called a magneto-optical trap.
-
Atoms are injected into a vacuum chamber,
-
and a magnetic field
draws them towards the center.
-
A laser beam aimed
at the middle of the chamber
-
is tuned to just the right frequency
-
that an atom moving towards it will absorb
a photon of the laser beam and slow down.
-
The slow down effect comes from
the transfer of momentum
-
between the atom and the photon.
-
A total of six beams,
in a perpendicular arrangement,
-
ensure that atoms traveling
in all directions will be intercepted.
-
At the center, where the beams intersect,
-
the atoms move sluggishly,
as if trapped in a thick liquid —
-
an effect the researchers who invented it
described as “optical molasses.”
-
A magneto-optical trap like this
-
can cool atoms down
to just a few microkelvins —
-
about -273 degrees Celsius.
-
This technique was developed in the 1980s,
-
and the scientists
who'd contributed to it
-
won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997
for the discovery.
-
Since then, laser cooling has been
improved to reach even lower temperatures.
-
But why would you want
to cool atoms down that much?
-
First of all, cold atoms can make
very good detectors.
-
With so little energy,
-
they’re incredibly sensitive
to fluctuations in the environment.
-
So they’re used in devices that find
underground oil and mineral deposits,
-
and they also make
highly accurate atomic clocks,
-
like the ones used
in global positioning satellites.
-
Secondly, cold atoms hold
enormous potential
-
for probing the frontiers of physics.
-
Their extreme sensitivity
makes them candidates
-
to be used to detect gravitational waves
in future space-based detectors.
-
They’re also useful for the study
of atomic and subatomic phenomena,
-
which requires measuring incredibly
tiny fluctuations in the energy of atoms.
-
Those are drowned out
at normal temperatures,
-
when atoms speed around
at hundreds of meters per second.
-
Laser cooling can slow atoms to just
a few centimeters per second—
-
enough for the motion caused by
atomic quantum effects to become obvious.
-
Ultracold atoms have already
allowed scientists to study phenomena
-
like Bose-Einstein condensation,
-
in which atoms are cooled almost
to absolute zero
-
and become a rare new state of matter.
-
So as researchers continue in their quest
to understand the laws of physics
-
and unravel the mysteries of the universe,
-
they’ll do so with the help
of the very coldest atoms in it.