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http://hdl.handle.net/2289/1729
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| Title: | Vortices in Bose–Einstein condensates: A review of the experimental results |
| Authors: | Srinivasan, R. |
| Keywords: | Bose--Einstein condensate vortices Gross--Pitaevski equation. |
| Issue Date: | Jan-2006 |
| Publisher: | Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, India |
| Citation: | Pramana, 2006, Vol.66, p3-30 |
| Abstract: | Rotating dilute Bose--Einstein condensates (BEC) of alkali
atoms offer a testing ground for theories of vortices in weakly
interacting superfluids. In a rotating superfluid, quantised
vortices, with a vorticity h/m, form above a critical velocity. Such
vortices have been generated in BEC of alkali atoms by different
techniques such as (a) wave function engineering of a two-component
BEC, (b) decay of solitons, (c) rotation of a thermal cloud before
cooling it below the condensation temperature, (d) stirring with an
`optical' spoon, (e) rotating a deformation in the anisotropic trap
in which the condensate is trapped and (f) by creating Berry phase by
adiabatically reversing the axial magnetic field. Since the core of
a vortex is a fraction of a micrometer in diameter, it cannot be
directly imaged optically. The condensate with vortices is allowed
to ballistically expand till the size increases by one order before
the vortices are imaged. Surface wave spectroscopy and the change in
aspect ratio of a rotating cloud are the other techniques used.
Studies have been made on the creation and dynamics of single vortex
and on systems with more than a hundred vortices. Results have been
obtained on vortex nucleation, stability of vortex structures, nature
of the vortex lattice and defects in such a lattice. Important
results are: (a) evidence exists that vortex nucleation takes place by
a surface mode instability; but this is not the only mechanism; (b)
the vortex lattice is perfectly triangular right up to the edge; (c)
in the initial stages of rotation of the cloud a tangled web of
vortices is seen; it takes a few hundred milliseconds before the
vortices arrange themselves in a lattice; this time appears to be
independent of temperature; (d) the decay of vortices appears to arise
from the transfer of energy to the rotating thermal component and is
dependent on temperature; (e) defects in the lattices such as
dislocations and grain boundaries are seen; (f) transverse
oscillations (Tkachenko modes) of the vortex lattice have been
observed; and (g) giant vortices have been produced. These will be
discussed. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2289/1729 |
| ISSN: | 0304-4289 |
| Copyright: | Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, India. |
| Appears in Collections: | Research Papers (LAMP)
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