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Canberra, Wednesday 23 May, 2001
ANU physicists create the coldest cloud in the Universe
Scientists at The Australian National University have produced the coldest
substance known, cooling a group of atoms to almost absolute zero (-273
degrees Celsius).
The super-cold cloud has only been replicated by a handful of international
scientists. Researchers from the ANUs Department of Physics are
the first in Australia to successfully reach such low temperatures.
It was a tremendously difficult and complicated experiment,
Dr John Close said. It took us three years to succeed in refining
and replicating the technique pioneered in the US.
During the intricate experiment the temperature of 1 million rubidium
atoms was first lowered with laser beams. Then using evaporative cooling
ANU scientists produced the lowest temperature ever reached, 100 billionths
of a degree above absolute zero (-273 degrees Celsius).
The atoms with the most energy evaporate from the trapped cloud
leaving the colder, less energetic atoms behind, Dr Close said.
The super-cold clouds produced at the ANU have unusual properties because
they straddle the boundary between everyday and quantum physics.
It has long been a quest in physics to find and explore this boundary
and now we are one of the few in the world able to do so, Dr Close
said.
Scientists will use the cold clouds to develop new technologies and investigate
fundamental questions in physics. The research also paves the way for
the development of atom lasers and atom interferometers that could be
used in the mining industry to detect mineral and oil deposits.
Web site: http://photonics.anu.edu.au/aoptics/
Photos :

ANU Reporter article:
http://www.anu.edu.au/reporter/V32/8/cloud.html
To arrange an interview contact:
Dr John Close, Physics group leader, on 02 6125 4390(w) 0421 150 740 (m)
or Clarissa Thorpe, Media Liaison Officer, on 02 6125 5575 (w), 0416 249
245 (m)
No:44/2001
© 2000 Marketing & Communications Division,
The Australian National University.
Questions or Comments?
Last Modified Tue, July 16, 2002
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