Quantum Physicists Get Close To Absolute Zero
grasshopper69 writes: "At Rice University, a group of researchers have make a ground-breaking step towards more knowledge about absolute zero. One group of the atomic particles shrank and the other stabilized during the cooling, a quantum condition that simulates the same process that keeps dense cold stars from completely collapsing under their own intense gravity, according to this article at cnn.com."
Well I'm about to start my postgraduate study in this area, so I can't say that I'm an expert yet... but I have to say, that's a darn good idea! If you don't mind, I might even do some research into this.
Maybe we'll be able to build quantum computers sooner than we thought?
please.
it's the taking apart that counts
If you're into cold matter stuff and near-to-zero tempratures, chech this link to see some nifty research done in Boulder, Colorado.
Pretty interesting, even if a bit more theoretical and less practical than the article we're discussing here.
Tongue-tied and twisted, just an earth-bound misfit, I
Learning to fly, Pink Floyd.
I thought I had an appetite for destruction, but all I really wanted was a club sandwich. --Homer J.
Well, one could get a lot closer. Currently, the Finns are holding the world record, and are below one billionth of a Kelvin.
It's very interesting that the quantum behavior of condensates has now been examined both with bosons (which can all be in the same quantum state) and fermions (which must obey the Fermi exclusion principle).
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Pauli's exclusion principle exists and the other does not; I mis-attributed Pauli's principle to Fermi because it only works with fermions. This is what I get for trusting my memory too much.
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