Fermionic Condensate is a superfluid phase formed by fermionic particles at low temperatures. It is closely related to the Bose–Einstein condensate, a superfluid phase formed by bosonic atoms
under similar conditions. Unlike the Bose–Einstein condensates, fermionic
condensates are formed using fermions instead
of bosons. The earliest recognized fermionic condensate described the state of electrons in a superconductor; the physics of other examples including recent
work with fermionic atoms is
analogous. The first atomic fermionic condensate was created by Deborah S. Jin in 2003. A chiral condensate is an example of a fermionic
condensate that appears in theories of massless fermions with chiral symmetry breaking.
Superfluidity
Fermionic condensates are called the
sixth state of matter. They are attained at temperatures lower than
Bose–Einstein condensates. Fermionic condensates are a type of superfluid. As
the name suggests, a superfluid possesses fluid properties similar to those
possessed by ordinary liquids and gases, such as the lack of
a definite shape and the ability to flow in response to applied forces.
However, superfluids possess some properties that do not appear in ordinary
matter. For instance, they can flow at low velocities without dissipating any
energy—i.e. zero viscosity. At higher velocities, energy is dissipated by the
formation of quantized vortices, which act as
"holes" in the medium where superfluidity breaks down.
Superfluidity was originally
discovered in liquid helium-4, in 1938, by Pyotr Kapitsa, John Allen and Don Misener.
Superfluidity in helium-4, which occurs at temperatures below 2.17 kelvins (K),
has long been understood to result from Bose condensation, the same mechanism
that produces the Bose–Einstein condensates. The primary difference between
superfluid helium and a Bose–Einstein condensate is that the former is
condensed from a liquid while the latter is condensed from a gas.
Fermionic superfluids
It is far more difficult to produce
a fermionic superfluid than a bosonic one, because the Pauli exclusion principle prohibits
fermions from occupying the same quantum state.
However, there is a well-known mechanism by which a superfluid may be formed
from fermions. This is the BCS
transition, discovered in 1957 by John Bardeen, Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer for describing
superconductivity. These authors showed that, below a certain temperature,
electrons (which are fermions) can pair up to form bound pairs now known asCooper pairs.
As long as collisions with the ionic lattice of the solid do not supply enough
energy to break the Cooper pairs, the electron fluid will be able to flow
without dissipation. As a result, it becomes a superfluid, and the material
through which it flows a superconductor.
The BCS theory was phenomenally
successful in describing superconductors. Soon after the publication of the BCS
paper, several theorists proposed that a similar phenomenon could occur in
fluids made up of fermions other than electrons, such as helium-3 atoms.
These speculations were confirmed in 1971, when experiments performed by Douglas D. Osheroff showed that helium-3
becomes a superfluid below 0.0025 K. It was soon verified that the
superfluidity of helium-3 arises from a BCS-like mechanism. (The theory of
superfluid helium-3 is a little more complicated than the BCS theory of superconductivity.
These complications arise because helium atoms repel each other much more
strongly than electrons, but the basic idea is the same.)
Creation of the first fermionic condensates
When Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman produced
a Bose–Einstein condensate from rubidium atoms in 1995, there
naturally arose the prospect of creating a similar sort of condensate made from
fermionic atoms, which would form a superfluid by the BCS mechanism. However,
early calculations indicated that the temperature required for producing Cooper
pairing in atoms would be too cold to achieve. In 2001, Murray Holland at JILA suggested a way
of bypassing this difficulty. He speculated that fermionic atoms could be
coaxed into pairing up by subjecting them to a strong magnetic
field.
In 2003, working on Holland's
suggestion, Deborah Jin at JILA, Rudolf Grimm at
the University of Innsbruck, and Wolfgang
Ketterle atMIT managed to coax fermionic atoms into forming
molecular bosons, which then underwent Bose–Einstein condensation. However,
this was not a true fermionic condensate. On December 16, 2003, Jin managed to
produce a condensate out of fermionic atoms for the first time. The experiment
involved 500,000 potassium-40 atoms cooled to a temperature of 5×10−8 K,
subjected to a time-varying magnetic field. The findings were published in the
online edition of Physical Review Letters on
January 24,
Based from:
- Guenault, Tony (2003). Basic superfluids. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-7484-0892-4.
- University of Colorado (January 28, 2004). NIST/University of Colorado Scientists Create New Form of Matter: A Fermionic Condensate. Press Release.
- Rodgers, Peter & Dumé, Bell (January 28, 2004). Fermionic condensate makes its debut. PhysicWeb.
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