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Bose-Einstein condensation

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Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation Christopher Townsend et al 1997 Phys. World 10 (3) 29 DOI 10.1088/2058-7058/10/3/21

2058-7058/10/3/29

Abstract

In 1924 the Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose sent Einstein a paper in which he derived the Planck law for black-body radiation by treating the photons as a gas of identical particles. Einstein generalized Bose's theory to an ideal gas of identical atoms or molecules for which the number of particles is conserved and, in the same year, predicted that at sufficiently low temperatures the particles would become locked together in the lowest quantum state of the system. We now know that this phenomenon, called Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC), only happens for "bosons" – particles with a total spin that is an integer multiple of h, the Planck constant divided by 2π.

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10.1088/2058-7058/10/3/21