A team of researchers at Universität Heidelberg has
built an early universe analog in their laboratory using chilled potassium
atoms. In their paper published in the journal Nature, the group describes
their simulator and how it might be used. Silke Weinfurtner, with the
University of Nottingham, has published a News & Views piece in the same
journal issue outlining the work done by the team in Germany.
Understanding what occurred during the first few
moments after the Big Bang is difficult due to the lack of evidence left
behind. That leaves astrophysicists with nothing but theory to describe what
might have happened. To give credence to their theories, scientists have built
models that theoretically represent the conditions being described. In this new
effort, the researchers used a new approach to build a physical model in their
laboratory to simulate conditions just after the Big Bang.
Beginning with the theory that that the Big Bang
gave rise to an expanding universe, the researchers sought to create what they
describe as a "quantum field simulator." Since most theories suggest
it was likely that the early universe was very cold, near absolute zero, the
researchers created an environment that was very cold. They then added
potassium atoms to represent the universe they were trying to simulate.
The atoms were chilled to just above absolute zero
and slowed down using lasers, resulting in the formation of a Bose-Einstein
condensate—a type of superfluid. The researchers then used light from a
specially designed projector to push the atoms into desired arrangements. Under
the setup, superfluid excitons known as phonons propagate in two directions.
By manipulating the speed of propagation, the
researchers were able to mimic theorized wave propagation in the early
universe. They suggest the behavior of their superfluid was somewhat similar to
the physics that governed spacetime and the production of particles in those
moments just after the Big Bang.
One of the first experiments conducted using the
simulator involved mimicking the expansion of the early universe—the atoms in
the superfluid moved in a ripple pattern in ways similar to what has been
predicted by theory if pairs of particles are being created.
Reference: Nature
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