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by mgibbs63
3126 days ago
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You can't actually suck all the energy out - the best you can do is get the atom into its ground state, which is still non-zero. The de Broglie wavelength of the atom is (h/p), where h is Planck's constant, and p is the atom's momentum. This is the wavelength of the atom's probability wave, so at the minimum value of p, the atom has some 'fixed maximum size', if you want to call it that (but size isn't really an accurate descriptor, more like 'the region in which you might find the atom'). The Bose-Einstein condensate is defined as the state where the de Broglie wavelength for atoms in a cloud is larger than the spacing between atoms - the probability waves overlap, and it is no longer possible to distinguish one from another. |
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but at the Raleigh criterion and under, the waveforms can still be quite different depending on the source distance, and furthermore you can definitely tell the difference of those waveforms from that of a single source.
What I've read about Bose-Einstein condensates seems to imply that in the condensate form, the probability waves not only become unresolvable but also synchronized in phase, AND the energy behavior of the aggregate is markedly different since they "all" (or at least according to Bose-Einstein statistics) occupy the same quantum state: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shdLjIkRaS8
Is the transition from Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics to Bose-Einstein statistics a sharp transition or not? In other words, are condensates a descriptive marker or a suddenly different state?