ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Low temperature physics in a comment series published in the Nature Physics journal

The four articles in the series discuss the development of physical measurements and the significance of new discoveries in physical phenomena.
012_aalto_sci_o-v_lounasmaa_laboratory_devices_5-1-2016_photo_mikko_raskinen_en.jpg

The article "Physics at its coolest" by Juha Tuoriniemi, Senior Researcher at the Low Temperature Laboratory, was published as part of the new at the beginning of this year. 

This column series range from thermodynamics to the reform of the SI system and from low temperature physics to plasma physics.

In his article on low temperature physics, Tuoriniemi records the development of research as well as contemplates why researchers are interested in ever colder temperatures. Important discoveries in low temperature physics have been quantum matter, superfluidity and superconductivity, which only occur at very low temperatures.

‘Atoms behave in a very different way at very low temperatures and the order in the system increases, reducing the thermal noise that disturbs measurements. This phenomenon enables very precise measurements’, says Juha Tuoriniemi.

Liquefying helium was an important turning point at the beginning of the 20th century. At the time, the rules of quantum mechanics were not understood, yet, but the previously unknown principles have gradually been uncovered. It took almost forty years before the quantum properties of helium were thoroughly understood, and it became possible to exploit this in cooling techniques when two types of helium, 3He and 4He, are mixed using a suitable ratio.

Atomic quantum gases, forming so-called quantum condensates, represent a new kind of order very close to absolute zero, and are one significant area of study. When quantum gases are controlled with external magnetic fields using laser cooling, extremely low temperatures can be reached. The absolute zero is at –273.15 degrees Celcius, which is exactly 0 degrees Kelvin but, as we know, it is impossible to reach that both in theory and in practise.

Researchers at Aalto University continue to perform basic research in low temperature physics. Many universities have given it up because it is now possible to buy cryostats, i.e. coolers. For example, the Finnish company , which was established in 2007 on the basis of research conducted in the Low Temperature Laboratory, offers cryostats. It has gained a significant market share in cryostats across the world.

The Low Temperature Laboratory still holds the 1999 record for the coldest solid materials, which is 100 picokelvins, i.e. 0.000 000 000 1 K. The cryostat built by the researchers, used when making the record, is still in use and serves the study of quantum matter at the moment. MIT holds the record for the lowest quantum gas temperature, 50 picokelvins, reached in 2010.

Juha Tuoriniemi
juha.tuoriniemi@aalto.fi
tel:+358503442846
Aalto University Department of Applied Physics
Low Temperature Laboratory

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Portrait of Kimmo Järvinen, from the Xiphera team. A man smiling at the camera
Research & Art, University Published:

Researcher-established company Xiphera growing rapidly

Xiphera Oy, which is celebrating its ninth anniversary, has developed hardware-based encryption solutions for the prevention of information security threats. The company is a deep tech company and its products are based on research and produce new technological solutions.
3D brain scan on screen showing colourful neural pathways inside a semi-transparent head model
Research & Art Published:

Applications open for Innovation Postdoc in AI

A fully funded, 12–month career track to turn your doctoral discoveries into a deep-tech startup.
Outdoor wooden daybeds with sheer beige curtains in a ruined courtyard garden with tall plants.
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A Finnish working group’s artwork brings a cooling garden to Spain, which is sweltering in the heat

Through their garden art installation, a group of Finnish architects and artists proposes vegetation and a sense of community, among other things, as solutions to urban heat islands and the environmental crisis.
Two children play with bright cartoon panels on a grey tiled wall, spinning sections to mix the figures.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

RealYou AI will develop the next generation of personalized AI decision assistants

Researchers to build cognitive machine learning that will improve decision-making with instantly personalized intelligent assistance.