Wednesday, July 09, 2025

A Century of Quantum Mechanics

CERN Courier has a special issue this month celebrating what they consider as the 100th anniversary of Quantum Mechanics.

Of course, the focus here is predominantly on elementary/particle physics. And yet, many of the most obvious demonstration and manifestation of quantum mechanics can be found not in particle physics, but in condensed matter physics. The Schrodinger-Cat type demonstration using SQUIDs, and the clearest manifestation of the effect of coherence can be seen in condensed matter experiment. To quote Carver Mead's article[1]:

Although superconductivity was discovered in 1911, the recognition that superconductors manifest quantum phenomena on a macroscopic scale (4) came too late to play a role in the formulation of quantum mechanics. Through modern experimental methods, however, superconducting structures give us direct access to the quantum nature of matter. The superconducting state is a coherent state formed by the collective interaction of a large fraction of the free electrons in a material. Its properties are dominated by known and controllable interactions within the collective ensemble. The dominant interaction is collective because the properties of each electron depend on the state of the entire ensemble, and it is electromagnetic because it couples to the charges of the electrons. Nowhere in natural phenomena do the basic laws of physics manifest themselves with more crystalline clarity.

Zz 

 [1] C.A. Mead, PNAS v.94, p.6013 (1997); or you may be able to access it here.

Tuesday, July 08, 2025

Another Sighting of a Possible Fifth Force?

First of all, I'm old! I started being in a student in physics since the early 1980's (do your own math). During all of that time when I have paid attention to physics, I've seen a lot of major milestones, including the discovery of High-Tc superconductors, discovery of exoplanets, the cold-fusion debacle, etc...etc.

The one thing that pops up every now and then is the claim of the possible discovery of this "fifth force". Honestly, even back in the 1980's, there were already such claims being made. None of the have amounted to anything as far as I can tell. Therefore, you can understand my "Oh no, this again?" reaction when I read the latest claim of the possible detection of the Yukawa particle as an indication of the existence of this fifth force (that article contains a link to the actual PRL paper that you can download).

This is not a knock on this work, heavens no. But the publicity surrounding this makes it sound as if this has not happened before. I guess it is not surprising that people have short memory, which is why mistakes are often repeated.

I'm going to wait a year and revisit this post and see if we have gone beyond first based on this discovery.

Zz. 

Tuesday, July 01, 2025

A Century of Bose-Einstein Condensation

Nature has published a wonderful review of the discovery and progress that we have made in understanding BE condensation since its discovery. It is an open access article and you can download the full article. I definitely like the figure that shows the major milestone in its development, but it would be nice if that is expanded even more to include references, or at least citation numbers so that I don't have to go hunting for them. 

Scanning through the article, I actually did a quick headcount on how many of the names mentioned in the article that I had met personally: Schrieffer, Leggett, Anderson, and Abrikosov. I believe Leggett is the only one still around as of this writing.

I didn't get too much into BE condensation even though I was working in superconductivity at that time. I was transitioning out of that field of study when the big BEC-BCS connection was experimentally established. Still, it was, and still, an exciting field to follow even on the peripheral.

Zz.