Fully understanding the complexity of Kevin Wright鈥檚 laboratory in Wilder Hall would require a deep knowledge of ultracold quantum physics. But who has time for that? Understanding a hot cup of coffee could do just fine.
鈥淭o visualize what it means for something to be a superfluid, imagine stirring your coffee with a spoon, then removing it,鈥 explains , assistant professor of physics and astronomy. 鈥淎nd then imagine that the coffee keeps swirling in circles forever, never coming to rest.鈥
Now imagine that the never-ending swirling coffee is not being stirred by a spoon but by a web of laser beams that crisscross in a way that somehow makes perfect sense in the 鈥渟pooky鈥 world of quantum physics.
And instead of coffee, it鈥檚 a cloud of lithium atoms that鈥檚 swirling around.
Welcome to the world鈥檚 first 鈥渢unable鈥 superfluid circuit that uses ultracold electron-like atoms. That maze of laser light and cloud of superfluid atoms are part of a one-of-a-kind microscopic test bed designed by Wright to explore how electrons work in real materials.

鈥淢uch of modern technology revolves around controlling the flow of electrons around circuits,鈥 says Wright. For the first time, researchers can now analyze the strange behavior of these kinds of quantum particles in a highly controllable setting.
While common conductive materials such as copper are well understood, researchers do not fully know how electrons move or can be controlled in exotic materials like superconductors.
The challenge is isolating and controlling individual electrons to study their behavior. The novelty of Wright鈥檚 circuit is that it uses a complete atom to demonstrate how one of its single, fundamental parts behaves. Unfortunately, there is no coffee analogy that suffices here, but according to Wright, 鈥淲e are learning about electrons without using electrons.鈥

Further comprehending Wright鈥檚 research requires the understanding that atomic particles can be either bosons or fermions. Bosons, such as photons, tend to bunch together. Fermions, such as electrons, tend to avoid each other.
While superfluid circuits using ultracold boson-like atoms already exist鈥攑ioneered by Wright when he was at the National Institute of Standards and Technology鈥攖he 天美麻豆 circuit is the first to use ultracold atoms that act as those asocial fermions.
鈥淓lectrons can do things that are far stranger and more rich than anyone has imagined,鈥 says Wright. 鈥淏y using electron-like atoms, we can test theories in ways that were not possible before.鈥
Lithium-6 makes the work possible. Although the isotope is a complete atom with a nucleus, protons and electrons, it behaves like an electron. The lasers are used to cool the lithium to temperatures near absolute zero and then to move the atoms around in ways that mimic electrons flowing around superconducting circuits. The lasers also detect how the atoms are acting and even provide the structure of the circuit鈥攁 microscopic racetrack in an ultrahigh vacuum chamber for the atoms to circle around.
Spread across three stainless steel optical tables stretching about 18-feet wide, the test bed gives physicists access to a quantum emulator that will allow them to study the formation and decay of currents that flow indefinitely without added energy鈥攖hat imaginary endlessly swirling coffee.
The lab鈥檚 success in creating the superfluid environment is detailed in a recent study written by Yanping Cai, Guarini 鈥21, , Guarini 鈥23, , Guarini 鈥24, and Wright that was published in .

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to be a part of something that nobody has ever done,鈥 says Allman, who Wright credits with being a master troubleshooter in the lab. 鈥淭his is the frontier of new research, and it is cool.鈥
Wright鈥檚 lab puts 天美麻豆 at the center of experimental research using ultracold fermions and has the potential to attract researchers looking to test theories and analyze special materials. Findings from the lab could also create opportunities for the development of new kinds of devices that use superconductors and other exotic quantum materials that can be useful for quantum computers.
鈥淲e have crossed the threshold to build test circuits with fermionic quantum gases,鈥 says Wright with a hint of modest pride. 鈥淒esigning and controlling the atom flow around a circuit with ultracold fermions in the same way that is done in an electronic device has just never been accomplished before.鈥
