Bright Solitons in a Bose–Einstein condensate. A soliton is a localized wave that, because of nonlinear effects, can travel for long distances without spreading out or losing its original shape. Solitons can occur in all kinds of waves, including sound and light. In fact, solitons are regularly used in telecommunications in optical fibers. Essentially a macroscopic matter wave, a BEC can also form solitons. Usually, however, a BEC quickly spreads after it is released from the trap in which it was created. Now, groups at Rice University in Houston and at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris have been able to form BEC solitons with lithium-7 atoms. Both groups used a tunable magnetic field to adjust the interatomic interactions from repulsive—necessary to form a stable condensate—to weakly attractive. The attractive interactions provided a self-focusing nonlinearity that exactly compensated for wavepacket dispersion. After releasing the atoms into a 1D potential, both...
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1 July 2002
July 01 2002
Citation
Benjamin P. Stein; Bright solitons. Physics Today 1 July 2002; 55 (7): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4796781
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