MIT researchers have successfully
cooled a gas of sodium potassium (NaK) molecules to a temperature of
500 nanokelvin. In this artist's illustration, the NaK molecule is
represented with frozen spheres of ice merged together: the smaller
sphere on the left represents a sodium atom, and the larger sphere on
the right is a potassium atom.
Credit: Illustration: Jose-Luis Olivares/MIT
The air around us is a chaotic
superhighway of molecules whizzing through space and constantly
colliding with each other at speeds of hundreds of miles per hour. Such
erratic molecular behavior is normal at ambient temperatures.
But scientists have long suspected that if temperatures were to
plunge to near absolute zero, molecules would come to a screeching halt,
ceasing their individual chaotic motion and behaving as one collective
body. This more orderly molecular behavior would begin to form very
strange, exotic states of matter -- states that have never been observed
in the physical world.
Now experimental physicists at MIT have successfully cooled molecules
in a gas of sodium potassium (NaK) to a temperature of 500 nanokelvins
-- just a hair above absolute zero, and over a million times colder than
interstellar space. The researchers found that the ultracold molecules
were relatively long-lived and stable, resisting reactive collisions
with other molecules. The molecules also exhibited very strong dipole
moments -- strong imbalances in electric charge within molecules that
mediate magnet-like forces between molecules over large distances.
Martin Zwierlein, professor of physics at MIT and a principal
investigator in MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics, says that
while molecules are normally full of energy, vibrating and rotating and
moving through space at a frenetic pace, the group's ultracold molecules
have been effectively stilled -- cooled to average speeds of
centimeters per second and prepared in their absolute lowest vibrational
and rotational states.
"We are very close to the temperature at which quantum mechanics
plays a big role in the motion of molecules," Zwierlein says. "So these
molecules would no longer run around like billiard balls, but move as
quantum mechanical matter waves. And with ultracold molecules, you can
get a huge variety of different states of matter, like superfluid
crystals, which are crystalline, yet feel no friction, which is totally
bizarre. This has not been observed so far, but predicted. We might not
be far from seeing these effects, so we're all excited."
Zwierlein, along with graduate student Jee Woo Park and postdoc
Sebastian Will -- all of whom are members of the MIT-Harvard Center of
Ultracold Atoms -- have published their results in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Sucking away 7,500 kelvins
Every molecule is composed of individual atoms that are bonded
together to form a molecular structure. The simplest molecule,
resembling a dumbbell, is made up of two atoms connected by
electromagnetic forces. Zwierlein's group sought to create ultracold
molecules of sodium potassium, each consisting of a single sodium and
potassium atom.
However, due to their many degrees of freedom -- translation,
vibration, and rotation -- cooling molecules directly is very difficult.
Atoms, with their much simpler structure, are much easier to chill. As a
first step, the MIT team used lasers and evaporative cooling to cool
clouds of individual sodium and potassium atoms to near absolute zero.
They then essentially glued the atoms together to form ultracold
molecules, applying a magnetic field to prompt the atoms to bond -- a
mechanism known as a "Feshbach resonance," named after the late MIT
physicist Herman Feshbach.
"It's like tuning your radio to be in resonance with some station,"
Zwierlein says. "These atoms start to vibrate happily together, and form
a bound molecule."
The resulting bond is relatively weak, creating what Zwierlein calls a
"fluffy" molecule that still vibrates quite a bit, as each atom is
bonded over a long, tenuous connection. To bring the atoms closer
together to create a stronger, more stable molecule, the team employed a
technique first reported in 2008 by groups from the University of
Colorado, for potassium rubidium (KRb) molecules, and the University of
Innsbruck, for non-polar cesium (Ce2) molecules.
For this technique, the newly created NaK molecules were exposed to a
pair of lasers, the large frequency difference of which exactly matched
the energy difference between the molecule's initial, highly vibrating
state, and its lowest possible vibrational state. Through absorption of
the low-energy laser, and emission into the high-energy laser beam, the
molecules lost all their available vibrational energy.
With this method, the MIT group was able to bring the molecules down
to their lowest vibrational and rotational states -- a huge drop in
energy.
"In terms of temperature, we sucked away 7,500 kelvins, just like that," Zwierlein says.
Chemically stable
In their earlier work, the Colorado group observed a significant
drawback of their ultracold potassium rubidium molecules: They were
chemically reactive, and essentially came apart when they collided with
other molecules. That group subsequently confined the molecules in
crystals of light to inhibit such chemical reactions.
Zwierlein's group chose to create ultracold molecules of sodium
potassium, as this molecule is chemically stable and naturally resilient
against reactive molecular collisions.
"When two potassium rubidium molecules collide, it is more
energetically favorable for the two potassium atoms and the two rubidium
atoms to pair up," Zwierlein says. "It turns out with our molecule,
sodium potassium, this reaction is not favored energetically. It just
doesn't happen."
In their experiments, Park, Will, and Zwierlein observed that their
molecular gas was indeed stable, with a relatively long lifetime,
lasting about 2.5 seconds.
"In the case where molecules are chemically reactive, one simply
doesn't have time to study them in bulk samples: They decay away before
they can be cooled further to observe interesting states," Zwierlein
says. "In our case, we hope our lifetime is long enough to see these
novel states of matter."
By first cooling atoms to ultralow temperatures and only then forming
molecules, the group succeeded in creating an ultracold gas of
molecules, measuring one thousand times colder than what can be achieved
by direct cooling techniques.
To begin to see exotic states of matter, Zwierlein says molecules
will have to be cooled still a bit further, to all but freeze them in
place. "Now we're at 500 nanokelvins, which is already fantastic, we
love it. A factor of 10 colder or so, and the music starts playing."
This research was supported in part by the National Science
Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Army
Research Office, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The original item was written by Jennifer Chu.
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