Inside NASA’s Cold Atom Lab, scientists form bubbles from ultracold gas, shown
in pink in this illustration. Lasers, also depicted, are used to cool the
atoms, while an atom chip, illustrated in gray, generates magnetic fields to
manipulate their shape, in combination with radio waves. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Produced inside NASA’s Cold Atom Lab, the bubbles provide new opportunities
to experiment with an exotic state of matter.
Since the days of NASA’s Apollo program, astronauts have documented (and
contended with) how liquids behave
differently in microgravity than they do on
Earth – coalescing into floating spheres instead of bottom-heavy droplets. Now,
researchers have demonstrated this effect with a much more exotic material: gas
cooled to nearly absolute zero (minus 459 degrees Fahrenheit, or minus 273
degrees Celsius), the lowest temperature matter can reach.
Using NASA’s Cold Atom Lab, the first-ever quantum physics facility aboard the International Space
Station, researchers took samples of atoms cooled to within a
millionth of a degree above absolute zero and shaped them
into extremely thin, hollow spheres. The cold gas starts out in a small, round
blob, like an egg yolk, and is sculpted into something more like a thin
eggshell. On Earth, similar attempts fall flat: The atoms pool downward,
forming something closer in shape to a contact lens than a bubble.
The milestone – described in a new paper published online Wednesday, May 18, in the journal Nature – is only possible in the
microgravity environment on the space station.
The ultracold bubbles could eventually be used in new kinds of experiments with an even more exotic material: a fifth state of matter (distinct from gases, liquids, solids, and plasmas) called a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). In a BEC, scientists can observe the quantum properties of atoms at a scale visible to the naked eye. For instance, atoms and particles sometimes behave like solid objects and sometimes behave like waves – a quantum property called “wave-particle duality.”
Ultracold clouds of atoms are manipulated into hollow spheres inside NASA’s
Cold Atom Lab aboard the International Space Station. In this series of images,
clouds are seen at different stages of inflation, capturing how a single cloud
of atoms looks as it is manipulated into a bubble. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
The work requires no astronaut assistance. The ultracold bubbles are made
inside Cold Atom Lab’s tightly sealed vacuum chamber using magnetic fields to
gently manipulate the gas into different shapes. And the lab itself – which is
about the size of a minifridge – is operated remotely from JPL.
The largest bubbles are about 1 millimeter in diameter and 1 micron thick
(that’s one-thousandth of a millimeter, or 0.00004 inches). They are so thin
and dilute that only thousands of atoms compose them. By comparison, a cubic
millimeter of air on Earth contains somewhere around a billion trillion
molecules.
“These are not like your average soap bubbles,” said David Aveline, lead
author on the new work and a member of the Cold Atom Lab science team at NASA’s
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “Nothing that we know of in
nature gets as cold as the atomic gases produced in Cold Atom Lab. So we start
with this very unique gas and study how it behaves when shaped into
fundamentally different geometries. And, historically, when a material is
manipulated in this way, very interesting physics can emerge, as well as new
applications.”
Why It ‘Matters’
Exposing materials to different physical conditions is central to
understanding them. It’s also often the first step to finding practical
applications for those materials.
Conducting these types of experiments on the space station using the Cold
Atom Lab enables scientists to remove the effects of gravity, which is often
the dominant force impacting the motion and behavior of fluids. By doing so,
scientists can better understand the other factors at play, such as a liquid’s
surface tension or viscosity.
Now that scientists have created the ultracold bubbles, their next step
will be to transition the ultracold gas composing the bubbles to the BEC state
and see how it behaves.
“Some theoretical work suggests that if we work with one of these bubbles
that is in the BEC state, we might be able to form vortices – basically, little
whirlpools – in the quantum material,” said Nathan Lundblad, a professor of
physics at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, and the principal investigator of
the new study. “That’s one example of a physical configuration that could help
us understand BEC properties better and gain more insight into the nature of
quantum matter.”
The field of quantum science has led to the development of modern
technologies such as transistors and lasers. Quantum investigations done in
Earth orbit could lead to improvements in spacecraft navigation systems and
sensors for studying Earth and other solar system bodies. Ultracold atom
facilities have been in operation on Earth for decades; however, in space, researchers
can study ultracold atoms and BECs in new ways because the effects of gravity
are reduced. This enables researchers to regularly reach colder temperatures
and observe phenomena longer than they can on Earth.
“Our primary goal with Cold Atom Lab is fundamental research – we want to
use the unique space environment of the space station to explore the quantum
nature of matter,” said Jason Williams, project scientist for Cold Atom Lab at
JPL. “Studying ultracold atoms in new geometries is a perfect example of that.”
More About the Mission
Designed and built at JPL, Cold Atom Lab is sponsored by the Biological and Physical Sciences (BPS) Division of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Washington. BPS pioneers scientific discovery and enables exploration by using space environments to conduct investigations not possible on Earth. Studying biological and physical phenomena under extreme conditions allows researchers to advance the fundamental scientific knowledge required to go farther and stay longer in space, while also benefitting life on Earth.
To learn more about Cold Atom Lab, go here: https://coldatomlab.jpl.nasa.gov/
Source: Ultracold
Bubbles on Space Station Open New Paths for Quantum Research | NASA
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