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The Rayleigh-Taylor instability in a binary quantum fluid

The visualization of the presentation for the May 2025 seminar

Speaker

Ian Spielman & Yanda GengUniversity of Maryland

Event Type

RQS Seminar

Date & Time

May 8, 2025, 11:00am

Where to Attend

PSC 2136 (University of Maryland) & Online

Zoom Webinar Link

Lunch will be served. 

Abstract:

Instabilities, where initially small fluctuations seed the formation of large-scale structures, govern the dynamics in wide variety of fluid flows. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability (RTI) is an iconic example that leads to the development of mushroom-shaped incursions when immiscible fluids are accelerated into each other. RTI drives structure formation throughout science and engineering including table-top oil and water mixtures; supernova explosions; and inertial confinement fusion.  Despite its ubiquity, controlled laboratory RTI experiments are technically challenging. Here we report the experimental observation of RTI in an initially phase separated binary superfluid consisting of a two-component Bose-Einstein condensate of ²³Na atoms. We induce the RTI at the interface between these components using a magnetic gradient force (i.e. the Stern-Gerlach effect) to press the components together and observed the growth of mushroom-like structures. The interface becomes stable when the components are pulled apart, and we spectroscopically measure the dispersion relation of the “ripplon” interface modes.