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Heating a dipolar quantum fluid into a solid.

J Sánchez-BaenaC PolitiF MaucherFrancesca FerlainoT Pohl
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Raising the temperature of a material enhances the thermal motion of particles. Such an increase in thermal energy commonly leads to the melting of a solid into a fluid and eventually vaporises the liquid into a gaseous phase of matter. Here, we study the finite-temperature physics of dipolar quantum fluids and find surprising deviations from this general phenomenology. In particular, we describe how heating a dipolar superfluid from near-zero temperatures can induce a phase transition to a supersolid state with a broken translational symmetry. We discuss the observation of this effect in experiments on ultracold dysprosium atoms, which opens the door for exploring the unusual thermodynamics of dipolar quantum fluids.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • monte carlo
  • single molecule
  • high speed
  • mass spectrometry
  • quantum dots