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Quantum Gas Goes Below Absolute Zero

First time accepted submitter mromanuk writes in with a story about scientists at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich who have created an atomic gas that goes below absolute zero. "It may sound less likely than hell freezing over, but physicists have created an atomic gas with a sub-absolute-zero temperature for the first time. Their technique opens the door to generating negative-Kelvin materials and new quantum devices, and it could even help to solve a cosmological mystery."

52 of 264 comments (clear)

  1. Not as new as it seems by Grantbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Lasers have had negative temperature for decades!

    1. Re:Not as new as it seems by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Funny

      Epic fail. Every Jedi knight builds his own light sabre. What the galaxy is coming to now a days, aspiring jedi knights nonchalantly ordering their light sabre by mail order... What next? Subject verb object order Yoda learns?

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    2. Re:Not as new as it seems by devent · · Score: 3, Informative

      Next is a pre-school class with Yoda with a bunch of 5 years kids. Also the kids get the light sabres from the dead Jedi, it's all in the brochure: So You Want Your Kid To Be A Jedi. Oh yeah, your kid need to take drugs if they get to puberty, because love is forbidden and leads to the dark side.

      --
      http://www.mueller-public.de - My site http://www.anr-institute.com/ - Advanced Natural Research Institute
    3. Re:Not as new as it seems by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      I want a laser wallet to store laser beam currency! (That's what they use in the future.)

      That'd be the coolest wallet ever!

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    4. Re:Not as new as it seems by Joce640k · · Score: 2

      Darth Vader doesn't worry about his honor, he orders them by the dozen from Farnell.

      --
      No sig today...
    5. Re:Not as new as it seems by Noughmad · · Score: 4, Funny

      What the hell want you from 900 year old man? English perfect?

      The Doctor seems to be doing quite well for his age.

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    6. Re:Not as new as it seems by Talderas · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just start teaching a "Defense Against the Dark Side" course. I'm sure that will turn out well.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    7. Re:Not as new as it seems by da007 · · Score: 5, Funny

      The Doctor seems to be doing quite well for his age.

      Doctor Who?

    8. Re:Not as new as it seems by nitehawk214 · · Score: 3, Informative

      A series produced protocol droid from junk parts. And no, that is not the only thing that bothered me with those movies.

      Maybe it was a junk pile of protocol droids? Jabba did have a habit of destroying them.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    9. Re:Not as new as it seems by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 2

      He also seems to be very patient, else he would be ordering from RS...

    10. Re:Not as new as it seems by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Who's on first. I don't know is on third

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    11. Re:Not as new as it seems by idontgno · · Score: 2

      If I were patient enough, I could probably produce a series-produced automobile from junk parts. Especially if I worked in a junkyard.

      Of course, a car yard is more likely to see junked 1968 Fords come through than any desert backwater world is likely to see lots of wrecked C3-series Protocol Droids... except that (as pointed out elsewhere) Jabba seemed to go through protocol droids at a fair clip.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  2. better explanation by ssam · · Score: 5, Informative

    wikipedia has quite a good explanation of negative temperature.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_temperature

    1. Re:better explanation by hydrofix · · Score: 5, Interesting
      An interesting quotation from that article:

      A substance with a negative temperature is not colder than absolute zero, but rather it is hotter than infinite temperature.

      It seems this is a very specific quantum mechanical perversion, and no classical systems can reach the state quantum physicists call "negative temperature".

    2. Re:better explanation by Rhaban · · Score: 5, Funny

      So, temperature uses unsigned floats?

    3. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Is this proof of a simulated universe?

    4. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sure, don't bother trying to learn why this is; just blame it on someone else and think yourself the better man for being ignorant.

    5. Re:better explanation by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

      Next on Slashdot... AC informs us that water is wet... Right after these important messages...

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    6. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Temperature isn't defined in physics as anything to do with heat, but the derivative of energy with respect to entropy. Absolute zero is the temperature at which there is no energy left in the system. At normal temperatures, it is positive. At absolute zero, it's zero. If you can create a system with dU/dS as negative, it's technically negative temperature, even though the system still has energy.
      It's hard to explain due to how things like temperature and energy are defined, not because physicists are being smug. There isn't a proper name for it because it doesn't happen very much. That's why it's news.

    7. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, the temp was calculated with the original Pentium!

    8. Re:better explanation by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Technically correct" is the best kind of correct.

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      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:better explanation by locofungus · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's a quirk of the way the temperature scale was defined.

      One possible definition of temperature:

      Put lots of little magnets in a magnetic field. They will line up with the field. At absolute zero there will be no (technically minimal[1]) deviation from them all being perfectly aligned. As you warm them up they will start to be less and less well aligned until at what we call infinite temperature, there is no alignment with the field at all and the alignment is completely random.

      But, if instead of warming them up, you flip the magnetic field they will then "cool" through "infinite" temperature.

      If we use this definition of temperature then it would make more sense to have absolute zero as negative infinite temperature, infinite as zero and still hotter temperatures as greater than zero.

      This makes the unreachability of absolute zero make more sense. "Infinite" temperatures (and greater than infinite) are only unreachable via trying to add more heat.

      Lasers utilize population inversion - which is a state that is impossible via naive thermodynamics and also does not have a sensible temperature as a result.

      [1] Zero point energy.

      Tim.

      --
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    10. Re:better explanation by JMJimmy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Water is not wet, it just feels that way ;)

    11. Re:better explanation by mrbester · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's the previously unquantifiable temperature of a McDonald's Apple Pie.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    12. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      If by "retarded," you mean "correct," then yes, that explination is very "retarded." If you bothered reading the wikipedia article, it explains it pretty clearly:
      "The paradox is resolved by understanding temperature through its more rigorous definition as the tradeoff between energy and entropy, with the reciprocal of the temperature, thermodynamic beta, as the more fundamental quantity."
      "The inverse temperature = 1/kT (where k is Boltzmann's constant) scale runs continuously from low energy to high as +, . . . , ."

    13. Re:better explanation by should_be_linear · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There cannot be any proof, it is obviously impossible to distinguish between "simulated" and "real" reality

      --
      839*929
    14. Re:better explanation by Sockatume · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Surely it's more important that technical terminology be technically correct than intuitively graspable? There's a reason that computer techs don't refer to the whole computer as the "hard drive", even though that's obviously exactly where you put all your files when they're on the computer.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    15. Re:better explanation by cgaertner · · Score: 5, Informative

      It seems this is a very specific quantum mechanical perversion, and no classical systems can reach the state quantum physicists call "negative temperature".

      This is by no means a quantum perversion, just a natural consequence of the definition of temperature as 1/T = dS/dE. There's nothing mysterious about negative temperatures from a thermodynamical point of view, it just happens that calssical systems don't exhibit this property because they do not come with an upper limit on energy, whereas there are quantum ones that do.

      The common interpretation of temperature as average energy per degree of freedom comes in via the equipartition theorem, but breaks down in various edge cases, eg when the energy levels cannot be approximated by continuity (eg heat capacity of diatomic gases) or for non-ergodic systems (some plasmas, I believe).

      As to the problem of infinite temperature: In a sense, thermodynamic \beta = 1/kT is the more natural measure of hotness and coldness and has a pole at T = 0. Coming from T > 0, this corresponds to infinite coldness, whereas coming from T < 0, this corresponds to infinite hotness.

    16. Re:better explanation by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 4, Funny

      There cannot be any proof, it is obviously impossible to distinguish between "simulated" and "real" reality

      Not that obvious to me. You're assuming the simulators have made a perfect simulation, which they may not have done. Or they could leave deliberate clues, if they so wished, which would help us distinguish simulation and reality. Of course, on a broader philisophical point, you could argue there would still be no difference - reality could be a simulation and still be real.

      http://www.technologyreview.com/view/429561/the-measurement-that-would-reveal-the-universe-as-a-computer-simulation/

      Hi there,
      You can stop philosophizing, I just deleted that guy from the simulation, he was getting annoying. Incidentally, if you subscribe to the specific flavor of mass delusion you guys call 'Christianity' and are wondering when the rapture will happen, it'll come the day I finally slip up while combining wild-cards and the 'rm' command on my Simulatron 6000 (TM).

      Sincerely,
      Your lord and cereator.

      --
      Only to idiots, are orders laws.
      -- Henning von Tresckow
    17. Re:better explanation by tgd · · Score: 2

      It seems to me to be a retarded description, like calling infinity + 1 a negative number.

      They need to use a proper name for it, not something that only makes sense if your the kind of person that likes to say things in such a way that no one else understands what you mean just so you can claim its technically correct with a smug attitude.

      Just means the computers the Matrix is running on happen to use signed values.

    18. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sure, don't bother trying to learn why this is; just blame it on someone else and think yourself the better man for being ignorant.

      Richard Feynman: "If you can't explain something to a first year student, then you haven't really understood it."

      I'll take Feynman's attitude towards obtuse, confusing jargon over your smug shit any day.

    19. Re:better explanation by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 3, Informative

      they all came to a complete stop

      which (seems nobody mentioned this) violate quantum mechanics in a very big way.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    20. Re:better explanation by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is one of the things I love about slashdot. People with no knowledge of a subject call professionals "retarded" and get modded insightful.

      It seems to me to be a retarded description, like calling infinity + 1 a negative number.

      Think about reciprocals.

      They need to use a proper name for it,

      How about "nagative temperature". That's a proper name for it.

      Temperature is defined by energy and entropy. Add energy and the entropy increases. That means the temperature is positive. How positive is how big that change is. Nice, straightforward, works well. Does whay you expect.

      Then some quantum physicists discovered that adding energy makes the entropy go down. Well, plug that into the definition of temperature and the number comes out negative.

      So basically, what you are claiming is that physicists are retarded because you don't like how the maths work out and you would rather they change the perfectly good classical definition of temperature to fit your sensibilities.

      Deal with it. Quantum physics is very strange and many ideas you bring with you from the classical world simply don't work.

      That doesn't make the professional physicists retarded, by the way.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    21. Re:better explanation by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While I think he gave himself an out in the specification/qualification of 'first year student', there's a degree of hypocrisy in that vs. this. (Specifically after the 4 minute mark where he basically says you can't properly explain certain things in physics through intuitive metaphors.)

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    22. Re:better explanation by slashmydots · · Score: 2

      So with zero energy, the atoms aren't moving at all. So what are the atoms doing at negative temperatures?

    23. Re:better explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hotness frequently dances around a pole.

    24. Re:better explanation by Urban+Garlic · · Score: 2

      It's actually not quantum mechanical, at least not explicitly, but it requires that the system in question have an ordered state that is at a high-energy bound.

      A classical system that does this is an array of magnetic dipoles in a magnetic field. When all the dipoles are aligned against the field, the system is fully ordered, and is in its highest-energy state. If you look at deviations from this state, what you find is that all of them increase the entropy (because the state is fully ordered), and decrease the energy (because the state is an upper bound for energy), which means that the ratio of delta-E over delta-S, or dE/dS, is negative. Thermodynamically speaking (again, classically), dE/dS is (one definition of) the temperature T.

      It's hard to tell if this is secretly really a quantum effect -- my example uses magnetic dipoles, which are arguably a quantum thing, either because of spin or because electronic orbitals that don't collapse because they're quantum states. But you don't need quantum mechanics in principle -- what you need is a low-entropy, high-energy state of the system with nearby states that have more entropy and less energy.

      I can't think of a fully classical example that does this, but someone clever might be able to.

      I actually got this negative-temperature question on my Ph.D. qualifying oral exam, and I totally kicked its ass.

      --
      2*3*3*3*3*11*251
    25. Re:better explanation by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 4, Informative
      Temperature isn't a property of individual atoms. It is a property of a huge set of atoms, describing their energy distribution.

      In a body with positive temperature, there are more atoms in the low energy states (moving slowly) than in the high energy states.

      In a body with negative temperature, there are more atoms in the high energy states than in the low energy states. Normally that can only happen if there is an upper bound to the energy. Kinda like a speed limit, or, more realistically, if the states being talked about are not related to speed at all, but to some other physical property of the atom (such as orientation of spin within an external magnetic field...)

    26. Re:better explanation by Jmc23 · · Score: 2
      So, cool heads, operating at negative temperatures, put lots of energy towards stopping the chaos of stupidity.

      Hot heads, operating at positive temperatures, are just bouncing around ignorantly smashing into people with their stupid comments and increasing the noise to signal ratio, and causing others to get all hot and bothered as well.

      I don't know, the classical and the quantum seem to be quite harmonious here. ...you just have to deal with the fact that with a 'cool head' of logic you also qualify for the description 'party-pooper'.

      --
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    27. Re:better explanation by dcollins · · Score: 2

      "Technically correct" does overlap with "Correct but useless".

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    28. Re:better explanation by OneAhead · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, since this is predominantly a computer science crowd, let's try to explain it in purely binary terms (or a simplified pure quantum mechanical model if you wish). Every particle in your system is a binary bit; 0 is ground state (low energy) and 1 is excited state (high energy). Now, our kelvin scale is defined so that 0K is all 0s (there's only one state that satisfies this criterion) and +infinity is a 50/50 mix of 0s and 1s (which has the largest number of possible combinations/states := highest entropy). That worked pretty well for a long time since one never can go higher than 50/50 through ordinary heating. The problems started when people figured out clever tricks to have more 1s than 0s. This is called a population inversion, and LASER and NMR/MRI rely on it. The temperature of such an inverted population would be "beyond infinity", in other words, not representable in the kelvin scale. The solution was to use negative temperatures for these inverted populations: all 1s would be -0K (the fact that -0 is not the same as +0 is not a problem because neither of these states can ever be reached), and the temperature would go down (-1, -2,...) as 0s are introduced, to ultimately reach -infinity at the same 50/50 mix as +infinity (so basically + and - infinity are the same state). This weird system turns out to have mathematically convenient properties. Just to get an idea, if one inverts this temperature scale (ie. define a new new (K^-1) scale that goes with 1/T), the 50/50 state would be 0(K^-1), all 1s is -infinity (K^-1) and all 0s is +infinity (K^-1), so the problems at 0 and infinity are solved.

      Remarks: - given the above, I feel it's more correct to state that inverting a population is going through infinity (as opposed to going through zero).
      - inverted populations are not stable; when perturbed, they always equilibrate to positive temperature states (and they cannot be maintained through ordinary heating as another reply incorrectly stated, though they can through pumping, as in continuous-wave lasers). This equilibration can, however, take several seconds (in NMR applications) - long enough for practically useful applications.

      TL:DR; version: negative temperature matter doesn't contain less energy than 0K; a good deal more in fact.

    29. Re:better explanation by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

      Wow, someone requires the presence of an emoticon to recognise humour.

      Your serve, Maestro.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  3. Dark Energy by metamarmoset · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Observtions during the experiment could point to new research on dark energy.

    From TFA:

    Another peculiarity of the sub-absolute-zero gas is that it mimics 'dark energy', the mysterious force that pushes the Universe to expand at an ever-faster rate against the inward pull of gravity. Schneider notes that the attractive atoms in the gas produced by the team also want to collapse inwards, but do not because the negative absolute temperature stabilises them. “It’s interesting that this weird feature pops up in the Universe and also in the lab,” he says. “This may be something that cosmologists should look at more closely.”

    1. Re:Dark Energy by Americium · · Score: 2, Informative

      Could we even answer that question without an absolute reference frame in an infinite universe with gravitational attractions from just about everywhere?

      And you go on like this, but the universe is expanding and accelerating away from us in all directions and there is no absolute reference frame, yet GR works just fine. Dark energy is responsible for this and was put into the equation as the cosmological constant by Einstein himself, although he removed it and it wasn't put back in until dark energy was discovered in the 90s.

  4. Older hardware by alendit · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sadly, our universe runs on a quite old hardware, which allowed the scientists to overflow the temperature variable. Why the Great Programmer didn't use unsigned longs ist beyond me, rookie mistake, really!

  5. Simple by famebait · · Score: 4, Funny

    Heat is just atoms moving around, after all, so negative temperatures are easy:
    just make the atoms move backwards.

    --
    sudo ergo sum
  6. I was right! by mjr167 · · Score: 2

    HAH! When I was a freshman in college a long long time ago, I lost points in a computer science assignment because I did not perform error checking to ensure the user enter temperatures were above absolute 0. Prof didn't believe me when I told her that wasn't a hard limit, so there!

  7. Sub Means below? by NSN+A392-99-964-5927 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So is this story misleading to say that absolute zero was achieved. Wikipedia The Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are defined so that absolute zero is 273.15 C or 459.67 F. https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero

    But in the news story it says SUB and SUB means below, yet there is no mention of the temperature whatsoever in the article and going beyond absolute zero is not possible even out in space! You can get close, but not to absolute zero otherwise you would have created the ultimate weapon!

    Enough said.

    --
    All cows eat grass!
  8. man pages by jabberw0k · · Score: 4, Funny

    You mean -- The serpent offered Eve a Perl script to parse /etc/passwd, and Adam's punishment was crypt (3) ...?

  9. Re:The real question... by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Proving/Disproving God isn't a Scientific Mission. Understanding how the Universe works is.
    If we ever figure it all out we can go.
    Well that is how the Universe Works and that is it.
    or we can go.
    Wow so that is how God did it.

    You are confusing the Idea of a God with Religious interpretations of God. Science has more or less disproven that the Stories in the Bible are often not Factual or at least exaggerations. But it doesn't disprove God.

    God and Science do not Mix. The God idea exists outside of Science as God is defined as a SuperNatural entity or more plainly God exists out of the rules of Observable Nature, Science is the study of Observing Nature.
    This come with a two edge sword.

    1. Any Science that states that God did it, is faulty because God is unobservable thus you cannot equate it as an observed fact. At best if there is a God Influence it would probably be considered a seemingly Random Element that will need further study.

    2. The counter to this, is Science can't disprove God, because he is out of Observable Ability. Thus any work to Disprove God will be trying to apply God as a factor to disprove it.

    Keep God out of Science, Also Keep Atheism out of Science as well.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  10. These researchers had to work at 110% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    These researchers had to give it 110% to achieve this less than nothing.

  11. Re:The real question... by TangoMargarine · · Score: 2

    Yes, if you make your own definition, it is possible to disprove said definition.

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