Thermometry and cooling of a Bose gas to 0.02 times the condensation temperature

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Abstract

Trapped quantum gases can be cooled to impressively low temperatures, but it is unclear whether their entropy is low enough to realize phenomena such as d-wave superconductivity and magnetic ordering. Estimated critical entropies per particle for quantum magnetic ordering are ∼0.3k B and ∼0.03k B for bosons in three- and two-dimensional lattices, respectively, with similar values for Néel ordering of lattice-trapped Fermi gases. Here we report reliable single-shot temperature measurements of a degenerate Rb gas by imaging the momentum distribution of thermalized magnons, which are spin excitations of the atomic gas. We record average temperatures fifty times lower than the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature, indicating an entropy per particle of ∼0.001k B at equilibrium, nearly two orders of magnitude lower than the previous best in a dilute atomic gas and well below the critical entropy for antiferromagnetic ordering of a Bose-Hubbard system. The magnons can reduce the temperature of the system by absorbing energy during thermalization and by enhancing evaporative cooling, allowing the production of low-entropy gases in deep traps.

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Olf, R., Fang, F., Marti, G. E., MacRae, A., & Stamper-Kurn, D. M. (2015). Thermometry and cooling of a Bose gas to 0.02 times the condensation temperature. Nature Physics, 11(9), 720–723. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3408

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