Number 559 #3, October 3, 2001 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
BEC on a Chip
First it was neutral atoms guided along a wire (Update
416). Then it was a beam of atoms steered over the surface of a
microchip (Update
486). Now the latest feat of atom optics, performed by a group at
the Max Planck Institute in Munich, is the creation of a Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) of rubidium atoms in a microscopic magnetic trap built
into a lithographically patterned chip. Not only was this the fastest-formed
BEC (it took only 700 ms to form, faster even than the all-optical BEC
method reporter earlier this year-see Update
545) but the condensate can be maneuvered around the microchip a
few microns above the surface (see Update
516); in fact the condensate was moved a distance of 1.6 mm. This
capability opens up the possibility of numerous atomtronic applications
in interferometry, quantum computing, navigation, lithography, holography,
and entanglement experiments. (Hansel et al., Nature,
4 October 2001.