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When their quantum properties are precisely controlled, some ultracold atoms can resist the laws of physics that suggest everything tends towards disorder
Zhao and his colleagues focused on atoms of the element rubidium, which they cooled to only 19 millionths of a degree kelvin above absolute zero by hitting them with lasers and electromagnetic fields. They used the same tools – lasers and electromagnetic fields – to arrange up to 19 such atoms into a chain.
That's really the state-of-the-art.
I wonder how (and if) this relates to the third law of thermodynanics. At zero temperature, only one microstate would exist with minimum energy, no? This would imply an entropy of exactly zero.
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