Frozen cloud of molecules acts as a single quantum object
PHYSICS 28 April 2021
By Matthew Sparkes
An image of caesium molecules in a Bose-Einstein condensate
Chin Lab
For the first time, researchers have created a frozen cloud of molecules that share the same quantum state, meaning it behaves as if it were a single molecule. The arrangement provides a blank slate for experiments that could yield new materials, such as room-temperature superconductors.
Cheng Chin at the University of Chicago and his colleagues formed a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) from thousands of caesium molecules, using lasers to remove their energy and cool them to near absolute zero.
BECs are often called the fifth state of matter, after solids, liquids, gases and plasmas, and their particles share the same quantum properties as each other. Chin says this is the ideal initial condition for any experiment, as it removes many variables. They all work together, they all work in the same way. What they are going to do next, theyll be doing that together. Essentially, its a kind of giant molecule, he says.
Scientists have been creating BECs with atoms since the 1990s, but cooling molecules to this extreme quantum state has proved more difficult. Eventually you run out of ideas how to get colder, says Chin.
More:
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2276079-frozen-cloud-of-molecules-acts-as-a-single-quantum-object/