I don't understand this, at least as it is explained here. Somebody care
to explain?

Udhay

http://www.nature.com/news/quantum-gas-goes-below-absolute-zero-1.12146

Quantum gas goes below absolute zero

Ultracold atoms pave way for negative-Kelvin materials.

    Zeeya Merali

03 January 2013

Temperature in a gas can reach below absolute zero thanks to a quirk of
quantum physics.

It may sound less likely than hell freezing over, but physicists have
created an atomic gas with a sub-absolute-zero temperature for the first
time1. Their technique opens the door to generating negative-Kelvin
materials and new quantum devices, and it could even help to solve a
cosmological mystery.

Lord Kelvin defined the absolute temperature scale in the mid-1800s in
such a way that nothing could be colder than absolute zero. Physicists
later realized that the absolute temperature of a gas is related to the
average energy of its particles. Absolute zero corresponds to the
theoretical state in which particles have no energy at all, and higher
temperatures correspond to higher average energies.

However, by the 1950s, physicists working with more exotic systems began
to realise that this isn't always true: Technically, you read off the
temperature of a system from a graph that plots the probabilities of its
particles being found with certain energies. Normally, most particles
have average or near-average energies, with only a few particles zipping
around at higher energies. In theory, if the situation is reversed, with
more particles having higher, rather than lower, energies, the plot
would flip over and the sign of the temperature would change from a
positive to a negative absolute temperature, explains Ulrich Schneider,
a physicist at the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich, Germany.
Peaks and valleys

Schneider and his colleagues reached such sub-absolute-zero temperatures
with an ultracold quantum gas made up of potassium atoms. Using lasers
and magnetic fields, they kept the individual atoms in a lattice
arrangement. At positive temperatures, the atoms repel, making the
configuration stable. The team then quickly adjusted the magnetic
fields, causing the atoms to attract rather than repel each other. “This
suddenly shifts the atoms from their most stable, lowest-energy state to
the highest possible energy state, before they can react,” says
Schneider. “It’s like walking through a valley, then instantly finding
yourself on the mountain peak.”

At positive temperatures, such a reversal would be unstable and the
atoms would collapse inwards. But the team also adjusted the trapping
laser field to make it more energetically favourable for the atoms to
stick in their positions. This result, described today in Science1,
marks the gas’s transition from just above absolute zero to a few
billionths of a Kelvin below absolute zero.

Wolfgang Ketterle, a physicist and Nobel laureate at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in Cambridge, who has previously demonstrated
negative absolute temperatures in a magnetic system2, calls the latest
work an “experimental tour de force”. Exotic high-energy states that are
hard to generate in the laboratory at positive temperatures become
stable at negative absolute temperatures — “as though you can stand a
pyramid on its head and not worry about it toppling over,” he notes —
and so such techniques can allow these states to be studied in detail.
“This may be a way to create new forms of matter in the laboratory,”
Ketterle adds.

If built, such systems would behave in strange ways, says Achim Rosch, a
theoretical physicist at the University of Cologne in Germany, who
proposed the technique used by Schneider and his team3. For instance,
Rosch and his colleagues have calculated that whereas clouds of atoms
would normally be pulled downwards by gravity, if part of the cloud is
at a negative absolute temperature, some atoms will move upwards,
apparently defying gravity4.

Another peculiarity of the sub-absolute-zero gas is that it mimics 'dark
energy', the mysterious force that pushes the Universe to expand at an
ever-faster rate against the inward pull of gravity. Schneider notes
that the attractive atoms in the gas produced by the team also want to
collapse inwards, but do not because the negative absolute temperature
stabilises them. “It’s interesting that this weird feature pops up in
the Universe and also in the lab,” he says. “This may be something that
cosmologists should look at more closely.”

    Nature
    doi:10.1038/nature.2013.12146


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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