BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Some people like company. Others prefer to be
alone. The same holds true for the particles that constitute the
matter around us: Some, called bosons, like to act in unison with
others. Others, called fermions, have a mind of their own.
Different as they are, both species can show "collective"
behavior -- an effect similar to the wave at a baseball game, where
all spectators carry out the same motion regardless of whether they
like each other.
Scientists generally believed that such collective behavior,
while commonplace for bosons, only appeared in fermions moving in
unison at very long wavelengths. Now, however, collective behavior
has been discovered at short wavelengths in one Fermi system,
helium-3.
A team led by Professor Eckhard Krotscheck -- a physicist who
recently joined the University at Buffalo from the Johannes Kepler
University in Linz, Austria -- predicted the existence of the
behavior using theoretical tools. Independently, but practically at
the same time, a French team observed the collective behavior.
A paper detailing both the theoretical and experimental
discoveries appears today in the journal Nature.
Krotscheck said the scientists' success in developing accurate
theoretical predictions lay, in part, in the fact that they focused
on mathematical tools instead of trying to reproduce
experiments.
"Knowing how nature ticks at a microscopic scale, we set out to
develop a robust theory that was capable of dealing with a wide
range of situations and systems," Krotscheck said. "We demanded
that our mathematical description is accurate for both fermions and
bosons, in different dimensions, and for both coherent and
incoherent excitations. Only after we were done, we looked at
experiments."
Krotscheck's colleagues on the study include Henri Godfrin,
Matthias Meschke and Ahmad Sultan of the Institut Néel,
CNRS, and Université Joseph Fourier in France; Hans-Jochen
Lauter of the Institut Laue-Langevin in France and Oak Ridge
National Laboratory; and Helga Bohm and Martin Panholzer of the
Institute for Theoretical Physics at Johannes Kepler University in
Austria. Meschke also belongs to the Low Temperature Laboratory of
Aalto University in Finland.