Press Release

Atom research May Help Detect Volcanoes and Oceans

By SpaceRef Editor
July 18, 2002
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Breakthrough research on waves of ultra-cold atoms may lead to sophisticated
atom lasers that might eventually predict volcanic eruptions on Earth and map a probable
subsurface ocean on Jupiter’s moon Europa.

The atoms were manipulated to form tidy bundles of waves, called solitons, which
retained their shape and strength. They were created in a laboratory at Rice University,
Houston, under a grant from NASA’s Biological and Physical Research Program through
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

Normally, when a wave forms — whether in water, light or atoms — it tends to
spread out as it travels. Not so with a soliton wave. It maintains its perfect shape without
spreading. In the Rice University research, the solitons are localized bundles of atom
waves.

Atom-wave solitons could be used in advanced lasers, which use atoms instead of
light photons. Dr. Randall Hulet, the Rice University physics and astronomy professor
who led the research team, said atom lasers may have many applications, some not yet
envisioned.

“Forty years ago, no one imagined that lasers would be used to play music in our
cars or scan our food at the grocery store checkout,” said Hulet. “We’re getting our first
glimpse of a wondrous and sometimes surprising set of quantum phenomena, and there’s
no way to know exactly what may come out of it.”

Hulet said atom lasers might improve instruments that study gravity variations to
locate and measure underground water, minerals, oil, caves and volcanic magma on Earth.

“Eventually, atom-wave lasers may enhance sensors for studying Earth and
various bodies in the solar system,” said Dr. Lute Maleki, principal investigator for the
Quantum Gravity Gradient Project at JPL. “With these advanced sensors, we’ll be able to
produce a 3-D map of underground features. By measuring levels of underground magma,
for example, scientists may be able to predict volcanic eruptions. This technology could
be used on a spacecraft to map the ocean believed to lie beneath Europa’s icy crust.”

In addition, atom lasers may yield extremely precise gyroscope navigation for air
and space travel. Computers would run faster if atom lasers were used to write directly
onto computer chips.

The first recorded observation of a soliton wave was in 1834, when a man in
Scotland saw a barge stop suddenly in a canal. This created a large bow wave, which
traveled at about 8 miles per hour without shrinking or spreading. The man followed the
wave on horseback for about a mile until he lost sight of it in the windings of the canal.
Scientists now know that this soliton water wave formed because of particular
relationships between the depth and width of the canal.

In their laboratory, Hulet and his team confined lithium atoms within magnetic
fields, cooled them with lasers to one billion times colder than room temperature, and
confined them in a narrow beam of light that pushed them into a single file formation. The
atoms formed a type of matter called a Bose-Einstein condensate, a quantum state where
classical laws of physics go out the window and new behaviors govern the atoms. Instead
of hitting each other and bouncing off like bumper cars, the atoms join together and
function as one entity. The team actually observed a “soliton train” of multiple waves.

Hulet co-authored a paper on the research, which appeared in the May 9 issue of
the journal Nature, with Rice University graduate students Kevin Strecker and Guthrie
Partridge, and Dr. Andrew Truscott, formerly a post-doctoral researcher at Rice and
currently on the faculty at Australian National University in Canberra.

More information on the experiment and the Biological and Physical Research
Program and the Fundamental Physics Program is available at:

http://atomcool.rice.edu

http://spaceresearch.nasa.gov

http://funphysics.jpl.nasa.gov

Hulet’s research was funded by NASA, the Office of Naval Research, the National
Science Foundation, and the R.A. Welch Foundation. JPL manages the Fundamental
Physics in Microgravity Research Program for NASA’s Office of Biological and Physical
Research, Washington, D.C. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena.

SpaceRef staff editor.