Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists' prediction of gas 'droplets' confirmed
Ground-breaking theoretical work by University of Otago physics researchers showing that under certain conditions gases can form into stable droplets – as liquids do – has now been confirmed experimentally by scientists in Germany.
The latter researchers have just published their findings in the prestigious journal Nature.
Otago Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics researcher Professor Blair Blakie, who led the team developing the theory, says the new ability to produce gas droplets is exciting as it opens the door to a range of potential applications.
"These droplets could, for example, form pristine nano-laboratories for performing chemistry reactions or making highly precise measurements of magnetic fields," Professor Blakie says.
It has been a longstanding question as to whether it is possible to make a gas self-bind in the same way that water molecules coalesce into stable droplets, he says.
In work appearing earlier this year in the journal Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review A, Professor Blakie's team determined that an extremely cold gas of highly magnetic atoms will self-bind into gas droplets that stabilise themselves, even in vacuum.
Their predictions were made using quantum calculations on high performance computing facilities provided through the National e-Science Infrastructure (NeSI).
The gas needs to be prepared under very specific conditions to observe the formation of droplets, he says.
"We worked out that it had to be at a temperature of a few millionths of a degree above absolute zero, a density more than a billion times lower than liquid water (about 100,000 times lower than air), and in a suitably adjusted magnetic field."
Under these conditions the gas will spontaneously develop into filament-shaped droplets of micrometer dimensions which persist as stable packages even after the gas is released from its container, he says.
More information: Matthias Schmitt et al. Self-bound droplets of a dilute magnetic quantum liquid, Nature (2016).
D. Baillie et al. Self-bound dipolar droplet: A localized matter wave in free space, Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review A (2016).
Journal information: Nature , Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review A
Provided by University of Otago