How it works Researchers use twisted surfaces to manipulate mechanical waves, enabling new technologies for imaging, electronics and sensors. (Courtesy: A Alù)
By simply placing two identical elastic metasurfaces atop each other and then rotating them relative to each other, the topology of the elastic waves dispersing through the resulting stacked structure can be changed – from elliptic to hyperbolic. This new control technique, from physicists at the CUNY Advanced Science Research Center in the US, works over a broad frequency range and has been dubbed “twistelastics”. It could allow for advanced reconfigurable phononic devices with potential applications in microelectronics, ultrasound sensing and microfluidics.
The researchers, led by Andrea Alù, say they were inspired by the recent advances in “twistronics” and its “profound impact” on electronic and photonic systems. “Our goal in this work was to explore whether similar twist-induced topological phenomena could be harnessed in elastodynamics in which phonons (vibrations of the crystal lattice) play a central role,” says Alù.
In twistelastics, the rotations between layers of identical, elastic engineered surfaces are used to manipulate how mechanical waves travel through the materials. The new approach, say the CUNY researchers, allows them to reconfigure the behaviour of these waves and precisely control them. “This opens the door to new technologies for sensing, communication and signal processing,” says Alù.
From elliptic to hyperbolic
In their work, the researchers used computer simulations to design metasurfaces patterned with micron-sized pillars. When they stacked one such metasurface atop the other and rotated them at different angles, the resulting combined structure changed the way phonons spread. Indeed, their dispersion topology went from elliptic to hyperbolic.
At a specific rotation angle, known as the “magic angle” (just like in twistronics), the waves become highly focused and begin to travel in one direction. This effect could allow for more efficient signal processing, says Alù, with the signals being easier to control over a wide range of frequencies.
The new twistelastic platform offers broadband, reconfigurable, and robust control over phonon propagation,” he tells Physics World. “This may be highly useful for a wide range of application areas, including surface acoustic wave (SAW) technologies, ultrasound imaging and sensing, microfluidic particle manipulation and on-chip phononic signal processing.
New frontiers
Since the twist-induced transitions are topologically protected, again like in twistronics, the system is resilient to fabrication imperfections, meaning it can be miniaturized and integrated into real-world devices, he adds. “We are part of an exciting science and technology centre called ‘New Frontiers of Sound’, of which I am one of the leaders. The goal of this ambitious centre is to develop new acoustic platforms for the above applications enabling disruptive advances for these technologies.”
Looking ahead, the researchers say they are looking into miniaturizing their metasurface design for integration into microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). They will also be studying multi-layer twistelastic architectures to improve how they can control wave propagation and investigating active tuning mechanisms, such as electromechanical actuation, to dynamically control twist angles. “Adding piezoelectric phenomena for further control and coupling to the electromagnetic waves,” is also on the agenda says Alù.
This episode explores the scientific and technological significance of 2D materials such as graphene. My guest is Antonio Rossi, who is a researcher in 2D materials engineering at the Italian Institute of Technology in Genoa.
Rossi explains why 2D materials are fundamentally different than their 3D counterparts – and how these differences are driving scientific progress and the development of new and exciting technologies.
Graphene is the most famous 2D material and Rossi talks about today’s real-world applications of graphene in coatings. We also chat about the challenges facing scientists and engineers who are trying to exploit graphene’s unique electronic properties.
Rossi’s current research focuses on two other promising 2D materials – tungsten disulphide and hexagonal boron nitride. He explains why tungsten disulphide shows great technological promise because of its favourable electronic and optical properties; and why hexagonal boron nitride is emerging as an ideal substrate for creating 2D devices.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming an important tool in developing new 2D materials. Rossi explains how his team is developing feedback loops that connect AI with the fabrication and characterization of new materials. Our conversation also touches on the use of 2D materials in quantum science and technology.
When diamond defects emit light, how much of that light can be captured and used for quantum technology applications? According to researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel and Humboldt Universität of Berlin, Germany, the answer is “nearly all of it”. Their technique, which relies on positioning a nanoscale diamond at an optimal location within a chip-integrated nanoantenna, could lead to improvements in quantum communication and quantum sensing.
Guided light: Illustration showing photon emission from a nanodiamond and light directed by a bullseye antenna. (Courtesy: Boaz Lubotzky)
Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres are point defects that occur when one carbon atom in diamond’s lattice structure is replaced by a nitrogen atom next to an empty lattice site (a vacancy). Together, this nitrogen atom and its adjacent vacancy behave like a negatively charged entity with an intrinsic quantum spin.
When excited with laser light, an electron in an NV centre can be promoted into an excited state. As the electron decays back to the ground state, it emits light. The exact absorption-and-emission process is complicated by the fact that both the ground state and the excited state of the NV centre have three sublevels (spin triplet states). However, by exciting an individual NV centre repeatedly and collecting the photons it emits, it is possible to determine the spin state of the centre.
The problem, explains Boaz Lubotzky, who co-led this research effort together with his colleague Ronen Rapaport, is that NV centres radiate over a wide range of angles. Hence, without an efficient collection interface, much of the light they emit is lost.
Standard optics capture around 80% of the light
Lubotzky and colleagues say they have now solved this problem thanks to a hybrid nanostructure made from a PMMA dielectric layer above a silver grating. This grating is arranged in a precise bullseye pattern that accurately guides light in a well-defined direction thanks to constructive interference. Using a nanometre-accurate positioning technique, the researchers placed the nanodiamond containing the NV centres exactly at the optimal location for light collection: right at the centre of the bullseye.
For standard optics with a numerical aperture (NA) of about 0.5, the team found that the system captures around 80% of the light emitted from the NV centres. When NA >0.7, this value exceeds 90%, while for NA > 0.8, Lubotzky says it approaches unity.
“The device provides a chip-based, room-temperature interface that makes NV emission far more directional, so a larger fraction of photons can be captured by standard lenses or coupled into fibres and photonic chips,” he tells Physics World. “Collecting more photons translates into faster measurements, higher sensitivity and lower power, thereby turning NV centres into compact precision sensors and also into brighter, easier-to-use single-photon sources for secure quantum communication.”
The researchers say their next priority is to transition their prototype into a plug-and-play, room-temperature module – one that is fully packaged and directly coupled to fibres or photonic chips – with wafer-level deterministic placement for arrays. “In parallel, we will be leveraging the enhanced collection for NV-based magnetometry, aiming for faster, lower-power measurements with improved readout fidelity,” says Lubotzky. “This is important because it will allow us to avoid repeated averaging and enable fast, reliable operation in quantum sensors and processors.”
Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar Yaghi have been awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize for Chemistry “for developing metal-organic frameworks”.
The award includes a SEK 11m prize ($1.2m), which is shared equally by the winners. The prize will be presented at a ceremony in Stockholm on 10 December.
The prize was announced this morning by members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Science. Speaking on the phone during the press conference, Kitagawa noted that he was “deeply honoured and delighted” that his research had been recognized.
A new framework
Beginning in the late 1980s and for the next couple of decades, the trio, who are all trained chemists, developed a new form of molecular architecture in that metal ions function as cornerstones that are linked by long organic carbon-based molecules.
Together, the metal ions and molecules form crystals that contain large cavities through which gases and other chemicals can flow.
“It’s a little like Hermione’s handbag – small on the outside, but very large on the inside,” noted Heiner Linke, chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry.
Yet the trio had to overcome several challenges before they could be used such as making them stable and flexible, which Kitagawa noted “was very tough”.
These porous materials are now called metal-organic frameworks (MOF). By varying the building blocks used in the MOFs, researchers can design them to capture and store specific substances as well as drive chemical reactions or conduct electricity.
“Metal-organic frameworks have enormous potential, bringing previously unforeseen opportunities for custom-made materials with new functions,” added Linke.
Following the laureates’ work, chemists have built tens of thousands of different MOFs.
3D MOFs are an important class of materials that could be used in applications as diverse as sensing, gas storage, catalysis and optoelectronics.
MOFs are now able to capture water from air in the desert, sequester carbon dioxide from industry effluents, store hydrogen gas, recover rare-earth metals from waste, break down oil contamination as well as extract “forever chemicals” such as PFAS from water.
“My dream is to capture air and to separate air into CO2, oxygen and water and convert them to usable materials using renewable energy,” noted Kitagawa.
Their 2D versions might even be used as flexible material platforms to realize exotic quantum phases, such as topological and anomalous quantum Hall insulators.
Life scientific
Kitagawa was born in 1951 in Kyoto, Japan. He obtained a PhD from Kyoto University, Japan, in 1979 and then held positions at Kindai University before joining Tokyo Metropolitan University in 1992. He then joined Kyoto University in 1998 where he is currently based.
Robson was born in 1937 in Glusburn, UK. He obtained a PhD from University of Oxford in 1962. After postdoc positions at California Institute of Technology and Stanford University, in 1966 he moved to the University of Melbourne where he remained for the rest of his career.
Yaghi was born in 1965 in Amman, Jordan. He obtained a PhD from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, US, in 1990. He then held positions at Arizona State University, the University of Michigan and the University of California, Los Angeles, before joining the University of California, Berkeley, in 2012 where he is currently based.
For many years, I’ve been a judge for awards and prizes linked to research and innovation in engineering and physics. It’s often said that it’s better to give than to receive, and it’s certainly true in this case. But another highlight of my involvement with awards is learning about cutting-edge innovations I either hadn’t heard of or didn’t know much about.
One area that never fails to fascinate me is the development of new and advanced materials. I’m not a materials scientist – my expertise lies in creating monitoring systems for engineering – so I apologize for any over-simplification in what follows. But I do want to give you a sense of just how impressive, challenging and rewarding the field of materials science is.
It’s all too easy to take advanced materials for granted. We are in constant contact with them in everyday life, whether it’s through applications in healthcare, electronics and computing or energy, transport, construction and process engineering. But what are the most important materials innovations right now – and what kinds of novel materials can we expect in future?
Drivers of innovation
There are several – and all equally important – drivers when it comes to materials development. One is the desire to improve the performance of products we’re already familiar with. A second is the need to develop more sustainable materials, whether that means replacing less environmentally friendly solutions or enabling new technology. Third, there’s the drive for novel developments, which is where some of the most ground-breaking work is occurring.
On the environmental front, we know that there are many products with components that could, in principle, be recycled. However, the reality is that many products end up in landfill because of how they’ve been constructed. I was recently reminded of this conundrum when I heard a research presentation about the difficulties of recycling solar panels.
Green problem Solar panels often fail to be recycled at their end of their life despite containing reusable materials. (Courtesy: iStock/Milos Muller)
Photovoltaic cells become increasingly inefficient with time and most solar panels aren’t expected to last more than about 30 years. Trouble is, solar panels are so robustly built that recycling them requires specialized equipment and processes. More often than not, solar panels just get thrown away despite mostly containing reusable materials such as glass, plastic and metals – including aluminium and silver.
It seems ironic that solar panels, which enable sustainable living, could also contribute significantly to landfill. In fact, the problem could escalate significantly if left unaddressed. There are already an estimated 1.8 million solar panels in use the UK, and potentially billions around the world, with a rapidly increasing install base. Making solar panels more sustainable is surely a grand challenge in materials science.
Waste not, want not
Another vital issue concerns our addiction to new tech, which means we rarely hang on to objects until the end of their life; I mean, who hasn’t been tempted by a shiny new smartphone even though the old one is perfectly adequate? That urge for new objects means we need more materials and designs that can be readily re-used or recycled, thereby reducing waste and resource depletion.
As someone who works in the aerospace industry, I know first-hand how companies are trying to make planes more fuel efficient by developing composite materials that are stronger and can survive higher temperatures and pressures – for example carbon fibre and composite matrix ceramics. The industry also uses “additive manufacturing” to enable more intricate component design with less resultant waste.
Plastics are another key area of development. Many products are made from single type, recyclable materials, such as polyethylene or polypropylene, which benefit from being light, durable and capable of withstanding chemicals and heat. Trouble is, while polyethene and polypropene can be recycled, they both create the tiny “microplastics” that, as we know all too well, are not good news for the environment.
Sustainable challenge Material scientists will need to find practical bio-based alternatives to conventional plastics to avoid polluting microplastics entering the seas and oceans. (Courtesy: iStock/Dmitriy Sidor)
Bio-based materials are becoming more common for everyday items. Think about polylactic acid (PLA), which is a plant-based polymer derived from renewable resources such as cornstarch or sugar cane. Typically used for food or medical packaging, it’s usually said to be “compostable”, although this is a term we need to view with caution.
Sadly, PLA does not degrade readily in natural environments or landfill. To break it down, you need high-temperature, high-moisture industrial composting facilities. So whilst PLAs come from natural plants, they are not straightforward to recycle, which is why single-use disposable items, such as plastic cutlery, drinking straws and plates, are no longer permitted to be made from it.
Thankfully, we’re also seeing greater use of more sustainable, natural fibre composites, such as flax, hemp and bamboo (have you tried bamboo socks or cutlery?). All of which brings me to an interesting urban myth, which is that in 1941 legendary US car manufacturer Henry Ford built a car apparently made entirely of a plant-based plastic – dubbed the “soybean” car (see box).
The soybean car: fact or fiction?
Crazy or credible? Soybean car frame patent signed by Henry Ford and Eugene Turenne Gregorie. (Courtesy: Image in public domain)
Henry Ford’s 1941 “soybean” car, which was built entirely of a plant-based plastic, was apparently motivated by a need to make vehicles lighter (and therefore more fuel efficient), less reliant on steel (which was in high demand during the Second World War) and safer too. The exact ingredients of the plastic are, however, not known since there were no records kept.
Speculation is that it was a combination of soybeans, wheat, hemp, flax and ramie (a kind of flowering nettle). Lowell Overly, a Ford designer who had major involvement in creating the car, said it was “soybean fibre in a phenolic resin with formaldehyde used in the impregnation”. Despite being a mix of natural and synthetic materials – and not entirely made of soybeans – the car was nonetheless a significant advancement for the automotive industry more than eight decades ago.
Avoiding the “solar-panel trap”
So what technology developments do we need to take materials to the next level? The key will be to avoid what I coin the “solar-panel trap” and find materials that are sustainable from cradle to grave. We have to create an environmentally sustainable economic system that’s based on the reuse and regeneration of materials or products – what some dub the “circular economy”.
Sustainable composites will be essential. We’ll need composites that can be easily separated, such as adhesives that dissolve in water or a specific solvent, so that we can cleanly, quickly and cheaply recover valuable materials from complex products. We’ll also need recycled composites, using recycled carbon fibre, or plastic combined with bio-based resins made from renewable sources like plant-based oils, starches and agricultural waste (rather than fossil fuels).
Vital too will be eco-friendly composites that combine sustainable composite materials (such as natural fibres) with bio-based resins. In principle, these could be used to replace traditional composite materials and to reduce waste and environmental impact.
Another important trend is developing novel metals and complex alloys. As well as enhancing traditional applications, these are addressing future requirements for what may become commonplace applications, such as wide-scale hydrogen manufacture, transportation and distribution.
Soft and stretchy
Then there are “soft composites”. These are advanced, often biocompatible materials that combine softer, rubbery polymers with reinforcing fibres or nanoparticles to create flexible, durable and functional materials that can be used for soft robotics, medical implants, prosthetics and wearable sensors. These materials can be engineered for properties like stretchability, self-healing, magnetic actuation and tissue integration, enabling innovative and patient-friendly healthcare solutions.
Medical magic Wearable electronic materials could transform how we monitor human health. (Shutterstock/Guguart)
And have you heard of e-textiles, which integrate electronic components into everyday fabrics? These materials could be game-changing for healthcare applications by offering wearable, non-invasive monitoring of physiological information such as heart rate and respiration.
Further applications could include advanced personal protective equipment (PPE), smart bandages and garments for long-term rehabilitation and remote patient care. Smart textiles could revolutionize medical diagnostics, therapy delivery and treatment by providing personalized digital healthcare solutions.
Towards “new gold”
I realize I have only scratched the surface of materials science – an amazing cauldron of ideas where physics, chemistry and engineering work hand in hand to deliver groundbreaking solutions. It’s a hugely and truly important discipline. With far greater success than the original alchemists, materials scientists are adept at creating the “new gold”.
Their discoveries and inventions are making major contributions to our planet’s sustainable economy from the design, deployment and decommission of everyday items, as well as finding novel solutions that will positively impact way we live today. Surely it’s an area we should celebrate and, as physicists, become more closely involved in.
On target A Kirigami-inspired parachute deploying to slow down the delivery of a water bottle from a drone. (Courtesy: Frédérick Gosselin)
Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, researchers in Canada and France have designed a parachute that can safely and accurately deliver its payloads when dropped directly above its target. Tested in realistic outdoor conditions, the parachute’s deformable design stabilizes the airflow around its porous structure, removing the need to drift as it falls. With its simple and affordable design, the parachute could have especially promising uses in areas including drone delivery and humanitarian aid.
When a conventional parachute is deployed, it cannot simply fall vertically towards its target. To protect itself from turbulence, which can cause its canopy to collapse, it glides at an angle that breaks the symmetry of the airflow around it, stabilizing the parachute against small perturbations.
But this necessity comes at a cost. When dropping a payload from a drone or aircraft, this gliding angle means parachutes will often drift far from their intended targets. This can be especially frustrating and potentially dangerous for operations such as humanitarian aid delivery, where precisely targeted airdrops are often vital to success.
To address this challenge, researchers led by David Mélançon at Polytechnique Montréal looked to kirigami, whereby paper is cut and folded to create elaborate 3D designs. “Previously, kirigami has been used to morph flat sheets into 3D shapes with programmed curvatures,” Mélançon explains. “We proposed to leverage kirigami’s shape morphing capability under fluid flow to design new kinds of ballistic parachutes.”
Wind-dispersed seeds
As well as kirigami, the team drew inspiration from nature. Instead of relying on a gliding angle, many wind-dispersed seeds are equipped with structures that stabilize the airflow around them: including the feathery bristles of dandelion seeds, which create a stabilized vortex in their wake; and the wings of sycamore and maple seeds, which cause them to rapidly spin as they fall. In each case, these mechanisms provide plants with passive control over where their seeds land and germinate.
For their design, Mélançon’s team created a parachute that can deform into a shape pre-programmed by a pattern of kirigami cuts, etched into a flexible disc using a laser cutter. “Our parachutes are simple flat discs, with circumferential slits inspired by a kirigami motif called a closed loop,” Mélançon describes. “Instead of attaching the payload with strings at the outer edge of the disk, we directly mount it its centre.”
When dropped, a combination of air resistance and the weight of the free-falling payload deformed the parachute into an inverted, porous bell shape. “The slits in the kirigami pattern are stretched, forcing air through its multitude of small openings,” Mélançon continues. “This ensures that the air flows in an orderly manner without any major chaotic turbulence, resulting in a predictable trajectory.”
The researchers tested their parachute extensively using numerical simulations combined with wind tunnel experiments and outdoor tests, where they used the parachute to drop a water bottle from a hovering drone. In this case, the parachute delivered its payload safely to the ground from a height of 60 m directly above its target.
Easy to make
Mélançon’s team tested their design with a variety of parachute sizes and kirigami patterns, demonstrating that designs with lower load-to-area ratios and more deformable patterns can reach comparable terminal velocity to conventional parachutes – with far greater certainty over where they will land. Compared with conventional parachutes, which are often both complex and costly to manufacture, kirigami-based designs will be far easier to fabricate.
“Little hand labour is necessary,” Mélançon says. “We have made parachutes out of sheets of plastic, paper or cardboard. We need a sheet of material with a certain rigidity, that’s all.”
By building on their design, the researchers hope that future studies will pave the way for new improvements in package home delivery. It could even advance efforts to deliver urgently needed aid during conflicts and natural disasters to those who need it most.
Nothing is really known about the origin of the world-famous “pitch-drop experiment” at the School of Physics, Trinity College Dublin. Discovered in the 1980s during a clear-out of dusty cupboards, this curious glass funnel contains a dark, black substance. All we do know is that it was prepared in October 1944 (assuming you trust the writing on it). We don’t know who filled the funnel, with what exactly, or why.
Placed on a shelf at Trinity, the funnel was largely ignored by generations of students passing by. But anyone who looked closely would have seen a drop forming slowly at the bottom of the funnel, preparing to join older drops that had fallen roughly once a decade. Then, in 2013 this ultimate example of “slow science” went viral when a webcam recorded a video of a tear-drop blob of pitch falling into the beaker below.
The video attracted more than two million hits on YouTube (a huge figure back then) and the story was covered on the main Irish evening TV news. We also had a visit from German news magazine Der Spiegel, while Discover named it as one of the top 100 science stories of 2013. As one of us (SH) described in a 2014 Physics World feature, the iconic experiment became “the drop heard round the world”.
Pitching the idea
Inspired by that interest, we decided to create custom-made replicas of the experiment to send to secondary schools across Ireland as an outreach initiative. It formed part of our celebrations of 300 years of physics at Trinity, which dates back to 1724 when the college established the Erasmus Smith’s Professorship in Natural and Experimental Philosophy.
An outreach activity that takes 10 years for anything to happen is obviously never going to work. Technical staff at Trinity’s School of Physics, who initiated the project, therefore experimented for months with different tar samples. Their goal was a material that appears solid but will lead to a falling drop every few months – not every decade.
After hitting upon a special mix of two types of bitumen in just the right proportion, the staff also built a robust experimental set-up consisting of a stand, a funnel and flask to hold any fallen drops. Each was placed on a wooden base and contained inside a glass bell jar. There were also a thermometer and a ruler for data-taking along with a set of instructions.
On 27 November 2024 we held a Zoom call with all participating schools, culminating in the official call to remove the funnel stopper
Over 100 schools – scattered all over Ireland – applied for one of the set-ups, with a total of 37 selected to take part. Most kits were personally hand-delivered to schools, which were also given a video explaining how to unpack and assemble the set-ups. On 27 November 2024 we held a Zoom call with all participating schools, culminating in the official call to remove the funnel stopper. The race was on.
Joining the race
Each school was asked to record the temperature and length of the thread of pitch slowly emerging from the funnel. They were also given a guide to making a time-lapse video of the drop and provided with information about additional experiments to explore the viscosity of other materials.
To process incoming data, we set up a website, maintained by yet another one of our technical staff. It contained interactive graphs showing the increased in drop length for every school, together with the temperature when the measurement was taken. All data were shared between schools.
After about four months, four schools had recorded a pitch drop and we decided to take stock at a half-day event at Trinity in March 2025. Attended by more than 80 pupils aged 12–18 and teachers from 17 schools, we were amazed by how much excitement our initiative had created. It spawned huge levels of engagement, with lots of colourful posters.
By the end of the school year, most had recorded a drop, showing our tar mix had worked well. Some schools had also done experiments testing other viscous materials, such as syrup, honey, ketchup and oil, examining the effect of temperature on flow rate. Others had studied the flow of granular materials, such as salt and seeds. One school had even captured on video the moment their drop fell, although sadly nobody was around to see it in person.
Some schools displayed the kits in their school entrance, others in their trophy cabinet. One group of students appeared on their local radio station; another streamed the set-up live on YouTube. The pitch-drop experiment has been a great way for students to learn basic scientific skills, such as observation, data-taking, data analysis and communication.
As for teachers, the experiment is an innovative way for them to introduce concepts such as viscosity and surface tension. It lets them explore the notion of multiple variables, measurement uncertainty and long-time-scale experiments. Some are now planning future projects on statistical analysis using the publicly available dataset or by observing the pitch drop in a more controlled environment.
Wouldn’t it be great if other physics departments followed our lead?
Adding energy to a system usually heats it up, but physicists at the University of Innsbruck in Austria have now discovered a scenario in which this is not the case. Their new platform – a one-dimensional fluid of strongly interacting atoms cooled to just a few nanokelvin above absolute zero and periodically “kicked” using an external force – could be used to study how objects transition from being quantum and ordered to classical and chaotic.
Our everyday world is chaotic and chaos plays a crucial and often useful role in many areas of science – from nonlinear complex systems in mathematics, physics and biology to ecology, meteorology and economics. How a system evolves depends on its initial conditions, but this evolution is, by nature, inherently unpredictable.
While we know how chaos emerges in classical systems, how it does so in quantum materials is still little understood. When this happens, the quantum system reverts to being a classical one.
The quantum kicked rotor
Researchers have traditionally studied chaotic behaviour in driven systems – that is, rotating objects periodically kicked by an external force. The quantum version of these is the quantum kicked rotor (QKR). Here, quantum coherence effects can prevent the system from absorbing external energy, meaning that, in contrast to its classical counterpart, it doesn’t heat up – even if a lot of energy is applied. This “dynamical localization” effect has already been seen in dilute ultracold atomic gases.
The QKR is a highly idealized single-particle model system, explains study lead Hanns-Christoph Nägerl. However, real-world systems contain many particles that interact with each other – something that can destroy dynamical localization. Recent theoretical work has suggested that this localization may persist in some types of interacting, even strongly interacting, many-body quantum systems – for example, in 1D bosonic gases.
In the new work, Nägerl and colleagues made a QKR by subjecting samples of ultracold caesium (Cs) atoms to periodic kicks by means of a “flashed-on lattice potential”. They did this by loading a Bose–Einstein condensate of these atoms into an array of narrow 1D tubes created by a 2D optical lattice formed by laser beams propagating in the x–y plane at right angles to each other. They then increased the power of the beams to heat up the Cs atoms.
Many-body dynamical localization
The researchers expected the atoms to collectively absorb energy over the course of the experiment. Instead, when they recorded how their momentum distribution evolved, they found that it actually stopped spreading and that the system’s energy reached a plateau. “Despite being continually kicked and strongly interacting, it no longer absorbed energy,” says Nägerl. “We say that it had localized in momentum space – a phenomenon known as many-body dynamical localization (MBDL).”
In this state, quantum coherence and many-body interactions prevent the system from heating up, he adds. “The momentum distribution essentially freezes and retains whatever structure it has.”
Nägerl and colleagues repeated the experiment by varying the interaction between the atoms – from zero (non-interacting) to strongly interacting. They found that the system always localizes.
Quantum coherence is crucial for preventing thermalization
“We had already found localization for our interacting QKR in earlier work and set out to reproduce these results in this new study,” Nägerl tells Physics World. “We had not previously realised the significance of our findings and thought that perhaps we were doing something wrong, which turned out not to be the case.”
The MBDL is fragile, however – something the researchers proved by introducing randomness into the laser pulses. A small amount of disorder is enough the destroy the localization effect and restore diffusion, explains Nägerl: the momentum distribution smears out and the kinetic energy of the system rises sharply, meaning that it is absorbing energy.
“This test highlights that quantum coherence is crucial for preventing thermalization in such driven many-body systems,” he says.
Simulating such a system on classical computers is only possible for two or three particles, but the one studied in this work, reported in Science, contains 20 or more. “Our new experiments now provide precious data to which we can compare the QKR model system, which is a paradigmatic one in quantum physics,” adds Nägerl.
Looking ahead, the researchers say they would now like to find out how stable MBDL is to various external perturbations. “In our present work, we report on MBDL in 1D, but would it happen in a 2D or a 3D system?” asks Nägerl. “I would like to do an experiment in which we have a 1D + 1D situation, that is, where the 1D is allowed to communicate with just one neighbouring 1D system (via tunnelling; by lowering the barrier to this system in a controlled way).”
Another way of perturbing the system would be to add a local defect – for example a bump in the potential of a different atom, he says. “Generally speaking, we would like to measure the ‘phase diagram’ for MBDL, where the axes of the graph would quantify the strength of the various perturbations we apply.”
Physicists at Osaka Metropolitan University in Japan and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) claim to have observed the quantum counterpart of the classic Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI), which is the most basic instability in fluids. The effect, seen in a quantum gas of 7Li atoms, produces a new type of exotic vortex pattern called an eccentric fractional skyrmion. The finding not only advances our understanding of complex topological quantum systems, it could also help in the development of next-generation memory and storage devices.
Topological defects occur when a system rapidly transitions from a disordered to an ordered phase. These defects, which can occur in a wide range of condensed matter systems, from liquid crystals and atomic gases to the rapidly cooling early universe, can produce excitations such as solitons, vortices and skyrmions.
Skyrmions, first discovered in magnetic materials, are swirling vortex-like spin structures that extend across a few nanometres in a material. They can be likened to 2D knots in which the magnetic moments rotate about 360° within a plane.
Skyrmions are topologically stable, which makes them robust to external perturbations, and are much smaller than the magnetic domains used to encode data in today’s disk drives. That makes them ideal building blocks for future data storage technologies such as “racetrack” memories. Eccentric fractional skyrmions (EFSs), which had only been predicted in theory until now, have a crescent-like shape and contain singularities – points in which the usual spin structure breaks down, creating sharp distortions as it becomes unsymmetrical.
“To me, the large crescent moon in the upper right corner of Van Gogh’s ‘The Starry Night’ also looks exactly like an EFS,” says Hiromitsu Takeuchi at Osaka, who co-led this new study with Jae-Yoon Choi of KAIST. “EFSs carry half the elementary charge, which means they do not fit into traditional classifications of topological defects.”
The KHI is a classic phenomenon in fluids in which waves and vortices form at the interface between two fluids moving at different speeds. “To observe the KHI in quantum systems, we need a structure containing a thin superfluid interface (a magnetic domain wall), such as in a quantum gas of 7Li atoms,” says Takeuchi. “We also need experimental techniques that can skilfully control the behaviour of this interface. Both of these criteria have recently been met by Choi’s group.”
The researchers began by cooling a gas of 7Li atoms to near absolute zero temperatures to create a multi-component Bose-Einstein condensate – a quantum superfluid containing two streams flowing at different speeds. At the interface of these streams, they observed vortices, which corresponded to the predicted EFSs.
The behaviour of the KHI is universal
“We have shown that the behaviour of the KHI is universal and exists in both the classical and quantum regimes,” says Takeuchi. This finding could not only lead to a better understanding of quantum turbulence and the unification of quantum and classic hydrodynamics, it could also help in the development of technologies such as next-generation storage and memory devices and spintronics, an emerging technology in which magnetic spin is used to store and transfer information using much less energy than existing electronic devices.
“By further refining the experiment, we might be able to verify certain predictions (some of which were made as long ago as the 19th century) about the wavelength and frequency of KHI-driven interface waves in non-viscous quantum fluids, like the one studied in this work,” he adds.
“In addition to the universal finger pattern we observed, we expect structures like zipper and sealskin patterns, which are unique to such multi-component quantum fluids,” Takeuchi tells Physics World. “As well as experiments, it is necessary to develop a theory that more precisely describes the motion of EFSs, the interaction between these skyrmions and their internal structure in the context of quantum hydrodynamics and spontaneous symmetry breaking.”