A glimpse into the cosmic horizon problem: measuring topological defects in a supersonically expanding toroidal Bose-Einstein condensate
ORAL
Abstract
In standard (non-inflationary) cosmology, the expansion of the early universe occurs at a speed larger than the speed of light. This expansion produces a “horizon problem”: the expansion causes initially near-by points to separate at a velocity larger than that of light and become causally disconnected. We mimic this horizon problem in an ultracold atomic experiment by creating a sonic analog of the expansion of the early universe. Our experiment consists of neutral $^{23}$Na atoms trapped in an all optical ring that expands at supersonic speed. Because information can propagate only at the speed of sound, a supersonic expansion creates causally disconnected regions, whose phase evolve at different rates. After the expansion ends, these regions of different phase recombine, giving rise to spontaneous non-zero winding numbers when integrated around the whole ring in a manner similar to that envisioned by Kibble and Zurek. We measure the resulting winding number distribution as a function of initial radius, final radius, expansion time and sound speeds. We compare to a theory that connects the geometry and speed of expansion to the number of causally disconnected regions, finding good agreement with the winding number distribution predicted according to the geodesic rule.
–
Authors
-
Avinash Kumar
Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland and NIST
-
S. Eckel
Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland and NIST, Joint Quantum Institute (NIST/UMD), Joint Quantum Institute (UMD/NIST)
-
Ian Spielman
Univ of Maryland-College Park, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland and NIST, JQI, NIST and University of Maryland
-
Gretchen Campbell
JQI, University of Maryland and NIST, College Park, MD, 20742, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland and NIST, JQI, University of Maryland and NIST, College Park, MD 20742, Joint Quantum Institute, NIST and UMD, University of Maryland