Early Universe Quantum Processes in BEC Collapse Experiments
E. A. Calzetta, B. L. Hu

TL;DR
This paper draws parallels between quantum processes in early universe cosmology and Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) collapse experiments, showing how BEC phenomena can model cosmological quantum field effects and fit experimental data.
Contribution
It demonstrates that BEC collapse dynamics can replicate early universe quantum processes, enabling laboratory tests of cosmological theories.
Findings
Quantum fluctuations in BEC explain bursts and jets during collapse.
Quantitative fits match experimental collapse times and particle emissions.
Potential for tabletop experiments to simulate early universe phenomena.
Abstract
We show that in the collapse of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) {For an excellent introduction to BEC theory, see C. Pethick and H. Smith, Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 2002)} certain processes involved and mechanisms at work share a common origin with corresponding quantum field processes in the early universe such as particle creation, structure formation and spinodal instability. Phenomena associated with the controlled BEC collapse observed in the experiment of Donley et al E. Donley et. al., Nature 412, 295 (2001)(they call it `Bose-Nova', see also J. Chin, J. Vogels and W. Ketterle, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 160405 (2003)) such as the appearance of bursts and jets can be explained as a consequence of the squeezing and amplification of quantum fluctuations above the condensate by the dynamics of the condensate. Using the…
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