Synopsis

A Dense, Cold Gas of Europium Atoms

Physics 15, s157
A Bose-Einstein condensate of europium atoms provides a new experimental platform for studying quantum spin interactions.
Y. Miyazawa et al. [1]

Since the 1995 creation of the first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), researchers have cooled and confined atoms into BECs to study various problems in quantum many-body systems. A BEC’s observable properties depend on the atom being confined. Thus, researchers want to create condensates from as many atomic species as possible. To that end, Yuki Miyazawa of the Tokyo Institute of Technology and his colleagues have now formed a BEC from europium atoms [1]. Europium atoms have a rare symmetric electronic structure, and they interact with one another via strong, magnetic dipole-dipole interactions. This combination of features should lead to a BEC in which the spin-dependent interactions of atoms are smaller than their dipole interactions, an unexplored regime. Thus, the study allows for the possibility of delving into new spin-related phenomena.

To create a BEC from europium, Miyazawa and colleagues confined europium atoms in an optical trap made from two crossed lasers. Reducing the power of one of the lasers, the team evaporatively cooled the atoms while keeping them concentrated in the region where the lasers crossed.

The team produced a BEC containing 5×104 atoms. Using established methods for measuring the short-range interactions between atoms, Miyazawa and colleagues found that they could manipulate the strength of these interactions by applying a very low magnetic field to the BEC. The team says that this control could enable researchers to create novel BEC quantum phases using this system.

In images of the atoms’ spatial distributions, the team also found evidence that both collapse of the BEC and structure formation within it resulted from the strong dipolar interactions of the atoms. This finding indicates that these dipolar actions persist within the BEC and compete with spin-dependent interactions.

–Rachel Berkowitz

Rachel Berkowitz is a Corresponding Editor for Physics Magazine based in Vancouver, Canada.

References

  1. Y. Miyazawa et al., “Bose-Einstein condensation of europium,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 129, 223401 (2022).

Subject Areas

Atomic and Molecular PhysicsCondensed Matter Physics

Related Articles

Witnessing the Birth of Skyrmions
Condensed Matter Physics

Witnessing the Birth of Skyrmions

Using thin layers of chiral nematic liquid crystals, researchers have observed the formation dynamics of skyrmions. Read More »

Seeing Collisions in Cold Molecular Clouds
Atomic and Molecular Physics

Seeing Collisions in Cold Molecular Clouds

Dense ensembles of laser-cooled molecules allow the observation of molecular collisions—a result that could lead to applications of cold molecular gases in quantum simulation and fundamental physics tests. Read More »

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED
Condensed Matter Physics

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED

A numerical investigation has revealed a surprising correspondence between a lattice spin model and a quantum field theory. Read More »

More Articles