Phenomenon Discovered In Ultracold Atoms Brings Us a Step Closer To Atomtronics 42
An anonymous reader writes "A new phenomenon discovered in ultracold atoms of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) could offer new insight into the quantum mechanical world and be a step toward applications in 'atomtronics'—the use of ultracold atoms as circuit components. Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology have reported the first observation of the 'spin Hall effect' in a cloud of ultracold atoms, acting as a single quantum object and then called BEC, the lowest state of matter, with solid and liquid coming next. As one consequence, the researchers made the atoms, which spin like a child's top, skew to one side or the other, by an amount dependent on the spin direction."
Works every time (Score:5, Funny)
I'm gonna look oh so smart.
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The summary (Score:1)
The summary, is lousy with, commas. I don't, know how I should, parse it and then called BEC, the lowest state of matter.
Re: The summary (Score:4, Informative)
Agreed. When it's not completely wrong, it still manages to be deftly incoherent.
The atoms don't physically spin. Spin is just a word used, in the absence of a more appropriate one, to communicate an inherent quantum mechanical property of atoms. Spin is closely related to magnetism.
Re: The summary (Score:5, Informative)
What do you mean by "physically spin"? They have angular momentum and behave in a way that is almost always consistent with them physically spinning. The classical description of nuclear spin is as useful as the Newtonian description of motion.
If you want to be pedantic, go all the way. There aren't really atoms, particularly not in a Bose-Einstein condensate, just excitations of particular fields.
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"What do you mean by "physically spin"? They have angular momentum and behave in a way that is almost always consistent with them physically spinning."
It's that "almost always" part that gets you.
Look... let's be straight. It is analogous to physical spin in many ways, but getting into the habit of thinking of quantum phenomena like that as though they were the analogous macro phenomena is generally a mistake. Because sooner or later it will bit you in the ass, due to that "almost".
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Re: The summary (Score:4, Informative)
In Coursera's recent "Exploring Quantum Physics" class, Ian Applebaum talked about spin. If electrons spin like tops spin, you can calculate the minimum speed it must be spinning from the electron's charge, size, and magnetic field. The problem is that the minimum speed exceeds the speed of light.
More at http://www.askamathematician.com/2011/10/q-what-is-spin-in-particle-physics-why-is-it-different-from-just-ordinary-rotation/ [askamathematician.com]
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You could say the same thing about motion. Yet we think about things moving in a classical way all the time.
The classical idea of spin works very well so long as you're talking about a reasonable number of particles. If you're not, you have to keep in mind that spin is quantized. In magnetic resonance imaging, for example, unless you're doing something obscure, classical spin is just fine, and it's what everyone uses. It's certainly good enough for a popular science article.
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There aren't really atoms, particularly not in a Bose-Einstein condensate, just excitations of particular fields.
I remember reading on Lubos' blog (I know, I know) that Nima Arkani-Hamed doesn't like that characterization of particles (FWIW, Lubos didn't agree).
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Lots of people don't like it. Nevertheless, that's the usual interpretation of quantum field theory. All the other interpretations are at least as weird.
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The one that gets me is that there are spin-1/2 particles [wikipedia.org] with symmetries that are only apparent after > 360 degrees of 'rotation'. Blows my mind.
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Imagine rotating a globe around the N-S axis AND the E-W axis at the same time, but only half as fast on the E-W axis. After a 360 degree rotation around the N-S axis you'll be looking at the same hemisphere you started with, but it will be upside down. Only after a 720 degree rotation around the N-S axis will it look the same as when you started.
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The atoms don't physically spin. Spin is just a word used, in the absence of a more appropriate one, to communicate an inherent quantum mechanical property of atoms.
Angular momentum at the subatomic level is the same thing as angular momentum at the macro level. Conservation applies. It's weird, it's not intuitive, but it's physical reality. It has commercial applications, too, such as NMR and MRI. Feinman's "QED" has a good explanation.
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Spin is closely related to magnetism.
The spin of charged particles gives them a magnetic moment (i.e., they have north and south magnetic poles). The spin of neutral particles, not so much.
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"The summary, is lousy with, commas. I don't, know how I should, parse it and then called BEC, the lowest state of matter."
Not just lousy with commas, but just plain lousy.
For just one example: "spin" is only an analogy. It isn't real "spin like a child's top". That's just false.
The article needs lots of improvement. Interesting subject matter, but pretty shoddy treatment from something called "Science World Report".
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Just imagine it in William Shatner's voice.
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We have discovered a new, lower state. Its called Slashdot editing.
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We have discovered a new, lower state. Its called Slashdot editing.
I would refute you but I have no energy.
environment maintenance (Score:2)
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Ultracold Atoms (Score:2, Funny)
Is this a new low power CPU family from Intel?
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No, if you're in doubt, read a few comments. You should see a pretty good mixture of "ARM is killing Intel!", "Intel is killing ARM!", "Why doesn't AMD make better stuff these days?", "Intel is a convicted monopolist!" and "Why don't we have low-end hexa-core processors yet?" comments.
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No, they just stuck the wafers in the refrigerator for a while.
Complexity != veracity (Score:1)
Gee, I'm completely mystified, so it must be TRUE!
Applications? (Score:1)
Deep space probes maybe? Maybe for super-computing tasks the economies of scale would make it practical to have cryogenic cooling?
Atomtronics? (Score:3)
I thought Disney World mastered that stuff years ago.
Great summary... (Score:1)
What, the, fuck.
A step closer to atomtronics (Score:3)