Observation of Vinen turbulence during far-from-equilibrium Bose-Einstein condensation
Abstract
Relaxation of far-from-equilibrium quantum fluids, intimately related to the emergence of long-range order, is theoretically associated with the decay of a turbulent isotropic tangle of vortex lines. We observe and study such decaying quantum turbulence in a homogeneous 3D atomic Bose gas. Using matter-wave techniques to magnify the gas density distribution, and then imaging a thin slice of the magnified cloud, we observe imprints of randomly oriented vortex lines and measure the vortex line-len...
Description / Details
Relaxation of far-from-equilibrium quantum fluids, intimately related to the emergence of long-range order, is theoretically associated with the decay of a turbulent isotropic tangle of vortex lines. We observe and study such decaying quantum turbulence in a homogeneous 3D atomic Bose gas. Using matter-wave techniques to magnify the gas density distribution, and then imaging a thin slice of the magnified cloud, we observe imprints of randomly oriented vortex lines and measure the vortex line-length density . The observed decay of agrees with the prediction for Vinen `ultraquantum' turbulence. Although our weakly interacting gases are highly compressible, their large-scale dynamics are consistent with the behavior of an incompressible hydrodynamic fluid, with the decay of not depending on the strength of the interatomic interactions and being similar to that in the strongly interacting superfluid helium.
Source: arXiv:2604.28191v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.28191v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.28191v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.28191v1
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May 1, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
0