17c起草社区

Skip to main content

17c起草社区 News

Superatom man

Monday, August 04, 2008
Myrna Anderson

Todd Kapitula doesn鈥檛 mind the cold. 鈥淐oming to a winter place doesn鈥檛 bother me at all,鈥 says Kapitula, a professor of who taught for 11 years at the University of New Mexico before making the switch to 17c起草社区 this past year. 鈥淚 have three small kids, and I like doing whatever it is you do with small kids in the winter.鈥

Colder than deep space

He also likes playing with cold atoms, very cold atoms, atoms that are exposed to temperatures much more frigid than the coldest part of deep space. 鈥淭he coldest you can get in deep space is four degrees Kelvin,鈥 Kapitula said. 鈥淚t is much colder than that. We鈥檙e talking nanokelvins (billionths of a degree Kelvin)鈥攕o, very, very cold.鈥

Atoms exposed to these extremes of low temperature, said Kapitula, become immobilized. 鈥淲hen they just sit there, they start talking to each other,鈥 he explained. 鈥淲hen they鈥檙e talking to each other, they want to all be the same.鈥 The cold atoms, as many as 30-to-50 thousand of them, begin behaving as a unit; they exhibit the same patterns. Together, they form what is known as a 鈥渟uperatom.鈥

鈥淵ou can stir these things with lasers or you can punch a hole in them,鈥 Kapitula said. 鈥淭his is fundamental science. We鈥檝e created this really cool thing, and then we mess with it.鈥

Creation before application

Kapitula recently earned a $142,969 grant from the for his research on superatoms, a project that he titled 鈥淲aves in Hamiltonian Systems with Applications to Bose-Einstein Condensates.鈥 The grant, spread out over three years, allows Kapitula to work with two 17c起草社区 student researchers per summer.

Kapitula emphasized that he doesn鈥檛 do any actual experimentation. He leaves the messing to others and concentrates on the math. 鈥淚 want to understand the patterns that you see,鈥 he said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 say we understand why certain patterns are generated and some aren鈥檛,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is the Holy Grail of an applied mathematician. If you solve this equation, you may have a reasonable explanation of what鈥檚 gone on in the experiment. There may be some very profound implications later on.鈥

There may also be applications later on, Kapitula added, for an entity like the superatom: 鈥淭he laser came in the 1960s. The applications came later,鈥 he explained. 鈥淵ou create the thing first.鈥

Human and non-human collaborators

To solve the equations based on the experiments (the first of which was conducted in the 鈥90s) Kapitula may have to rely on Dahl, 17c起草社区鈥檚 second generation of supercomputer. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 going to simulate anything real,鈥 he said, 鈥淚鈥檓 going to need supercomputing ability.鈥

Kapitula has an ongoing collaboration on his research with P. G. Kevrekidis, a mathematical physicist at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and Zhigang Chen, a physicist at San Francisco State University. The three earned an Outstanding Paper Prize from the for an article based on their research: 鈥淭hree is a Crowd: Solitary Waves in Photorefractive Media with Three Potential Wells.鈥

Kapitula remembered getting the e-mail announcing the SIAM honor: 鈥淚 was going to delete, and I noticed it was addressed to me and my two co-authors,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 read it and thought it was a joke.鈥 Both of his collaborators had the same reaction. 鈥淔inally, we accepted it was real,鈥 he said.

Math in the real world

As one of three applied mathematicians on the faculty, Kapitula provides a much-needed augmentation of 17c起草社区鈥檚 mathematics and statistics department, said department chair Mike Stob. 鈥淭he distinction is based on how closely the mathematics they worked on is motivated by and comes out of real-world problems,鈥 he said of applied mathematics. 鈥淭odd鈥檚 specialty is the application of mathematics to physics.鈥

Kapitula was also a find for 17c起草社区 because he brought with him an established research program, said Stob: 鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard for a brand-new PhD to come up with a research program with the heavy teaching load at 17c起草社区. So we鈥檝e always found that people who come here with a research program underway find it easier to maintain it.鈥

The studier of superatoms brings another big bonus with him, added Stob: His wife, Laura, a statistician, who will commence her 17c起草社区 teaching career in 2009. 鈥淪he will be our only PhD statistician, even though we teach 500 students a year statistics,鈥 said Stob. 鈥淲e got two people in areas we really needed.鈥

Equations are not simply puzzles to Kapitula; they embody the 鈥渓anguage of the Creator,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he same equation can be used to model light going down an optical fiber or deep water waves,鈥 he said. 鈥淎n equation has a beauty to it, a structure to it that should not be there鈥攗nless there was a Creator. When I do math, I see the beauty of creation, the structure of creation.鈥

Baptized in the Russian Orthodox Church, Kapitula spent 30 years as an agnostic-atheist. He became a Christian in 1999. 鈥淕od,鈥 he summarized, 鈥渋s patient.鈥