0 citations
An Optical Spoon Stirs Up Vortices in a Bose–Einstein Condensate
Physics Today2000Vol. 53(8), pp. 19–21
Abstract
Since the early days of Bose–Einstein condensates (BECs) in atomic gases, comparisons have been drawn to the other familiar bosonic systems: liquid helium-4 and the Cooper pairs of superconductors. Two of the early questions asked of BECs were whether they had similar coherence properties and whether they were superfluids. In He4, it is rather difficult to study properties of the condensate, such as the condensate fraction, whereas the measurement of superfluidity is fairly straightforward. The opposite has proved true for atomic condensates: The condensate fraction as a function of temperature was found early on, but only recently has their superfluidity been placed on firm footing (see PHYSICS TODAY, November 1999, page 17).
Related Papers
- → Thermal depinning of a single superconducting vortex in Nb(1994)20 cited
- → Anomalously Weak Cooper Pair-breaking by Exchange Energy in Ferromagnet/Superconductor Bilayers(2014)1 cited
- → Superfluid film formation in dilute liquid mixtures of helium-4 in helium-3(1967)24 cited
- → An Optical Spoon Stirs Up Vortices in a Bose–Einstein Condensate(2000)7 cited
- → Anomalously Weak Cooper Pair-breaking by Exchange Energy in Ferromagnet/Superconductor Bilayers(2014)