Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons

In summary, researchers have discovered a way to "freeze" photons, creating a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) which behaves like a quantum liquid or gas. This is due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, where the system will relax to its ground state with minimum kinetic and interaction energy. In the case of light BECs, photons usually annihilate themselves into the vacuum, but the researchers were able to engineer a system with effective mass and weak repulsive interactions to achieve BEC physics. When the system is warmed back to its original temperature, new photons are emitted due to every object at finite temperature emitting radiation.
  • #1
sqljunkey
181
8
https://www.livescience.com/10288-kind-light-created-physics-breakthrough.html

I was reading here that you can freeze photons.
What does it mean to freeze up a photon, are you slowing down it's motion, changing it's energy levels. Or are you changing the state of the particles around it and that then would cause it to change it's state?
 
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  • #2
The photons aren't really "frozen," a work which usually is used to describe a solid state of matter (where particles form some regular lattice). A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is more like a quantum liquid or gas depending on whether the BEC is approximately incompressible or not. And here I should say that when we call quantum phases "solid/liquid/gas" we are really making analogies with their classical definitions, and their quantum counterparts behave differently in general.

The reason why one gets a liquid-like state at low temperatures involves the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. At low temperature, the system will relax to its ground state, meaning a state of minimum kinetic energy and minimum interaction energy. Here we can model the system as have some short-range repulsive interaction between any pair of particles. In a classical system, one expects that all particles will simply have zero kinetic energy in their ground state, and one simply chooses the particle positions such that the interactions between them are minimized - this is usually some lattice, and the ground state is a solid.

In contrast, in quantum mechanics the Heisenberg uncertainty relation tells you that you cannot place the particles in definite positions without the particles having extremely large kinetic energy. If the repulsive interactions between particles is small enough, the system will prefer to have low kinetic energy and have the particle positions be uncertain across a large distance (the particles overlap, but the reduction in kinetic energy beats this interaction cost). Then the system looks like a liquid in that particle positions fluctuate so that on average the particle density is constant everywhere.

Everything I discussed above qualitatively describes massive bosons - usually for light BECs don't form because photons can just choose to annihilate themselves into the vacuum, so the low energy state is just a state with no photons. The technical achievement of these researchers was to engineer a system where photons have an effective mass and some weak repulsive interactions between them, so they could get BEC physics.
 
  • #3
Okay thanks. Now in the scenario where all the photons get annihilated when cooled down does it also mean that when it is warmed back to the original temperature these photons would reemerge?
 
  • #4
sqljunkey said:
Now in the scenario where all the photons get annihilated when cooled down does it also mean that when it is warmed back to the original temperature these photons would reemerge?

Yes, and this leads to the fact that every object at finite temperature emits radiation. This is how infrared imaging works for example.
 
  • #5
sqljunkey said:
does it also mean that when it is warmed back to the original temperature these photons would reemerge?
You get photons again - but they are unrelated to the photons that were present before.
 

Related to Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons

What is Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons?

Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons are a state of matter in which a large number of photons, the particles of light, are cooled to near absolute zero. At this temperature, the photons lose their individual identities and behave as a single super-particle, exhibiting quantum effects on a macroscopic scale.

How is Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons created?

Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons are created by using lasers to cool a gas of photons to extremely low temperatures, typically around 100 nanokelvins. This process is known as laser cooling and involves using a combination of magnetic fields and laser beams to slow down and trap the photons.

What are the properties of Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons?

Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons have unique properties that distinguish them from other states of matter. They have a single quantum state, meaning all the photons share the same energy and phase. They also exhibit interference patterns, similar to those seen in waves, and can move without resistance, known as superfluidity.

What are the potential applications of Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons?

Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons have a wide range of potential applications in fields such as quantum computing, precision measurements, and optical sensors. They can also be used to study fundamental physics and could potentially lead to the development of new technologies in the future.

What are the challenges in studying Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons?

One of the main challenges in studying Bose-Einstein Condensate Photons is their extreme sensitivity to external influences. Even the tiniest disturbances, such as stray light or magnetic fields, can disrupt the delicate balance required for their formation. Additionally, the extremely low temperatures required for their creation make it difficult to maintain and study them for extended periods of time.

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