Date: 5 July 2005
Time: 6.30 pm
Venue: University Cultural Centre, NUS
Title: Bose-Einstein Condensation: Quantum
Weirdness at the Lowest Temperature in the Universe
Abstract:
In 1924 Einstein predicted that a gas would
undergo a dramatic transformation at a sufficiently
low temperature (now known as Bose-Einstein condensation
or BEC). In 1995, my group was able to observe this
transformation by cooling a gas sample to the unprecedented
temperature of less than 100 billionths of a degree
above absolute zero. The BEC state is a novel form of
matter in which a large number of atoms lose their individual
identities and behave as a single quantum entity, the
“superatom”. This entity is the atom analogue to laser
light, and, although large enough to be easily seen
and manipulated, exhibits the nonintuitive quantum behavior
normally important only at much tinier size scales.
The study and use of the curious properties of BEC has
now become an important subfield of physics. I will
discuss how we create BEC and some of the subsequent
research we have done on it. Interactive applets as
a tool for teaching science will be demonstrated in
the presentation.
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