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Knots are familiar entities that appear at a captivating nexus of art, technology, mathematics, and science. As topologically stable objects within field theories, they have been speculatively proposed as explanations for diverse persistent phenomena, from atoms and molecules to ball lightning and cosmic textures in the universe. Recent experiments have observed knots in a variety of classical contexts, including nematic liquid crystals, DNA, optical beams, and water. However, no experimental observations of knots have yet been reported in quantum matter. We demonstrate here the controlled creation and detection of knot solitons in the order parameter of a spinor Bose-Einstein condensate. The experimentally obtained images of the superfluid directly reveal the circular shape of the soliton core and its accompanying linked rings. Importantly, the observed texture corresponds to a topologically non-trivial element of the third homotopy group and demonstrates the celebrated Hopf fibration, which unites many seemingly unrelated physical contexts. Our observations of the knot soliton establish an experimental foundation for future studies of their stability and dynamics within quantum systems.
We construct a new family of null solutions to Maxwells equations in free space whose field lines encode all torus knots and links. The evolution of these null fields, analogous to a compressible flow along the Poynting vector that is both geodesic a
We theoretically study the creation of knot structures in the polar phase of spin-1 BECs using the counterdiabatic protocol in an unusual fashion. We provide an analytic solution to the evolution of the external magnetic field that is used to imprint
We examine on the static and dynamical properties of quantum knots in a Bose-Einstein condensate. In particular, we consider the Gross-Pitaevskii model and revise a technique to construct ab initio the condensate wave-function of a generic torus knot
In this paper we show how to place Michael Berrys discovery of knotted zeros in the quantum states of hydrogen in the context of general knot theory and in the context of our formulations for quantum knots. Berry gave a time independent wave function
Turbulence is characterized by a large number of degrees of freedom, distributed over several length scales, that result into a disordered state of a fluid. The field of quantum turbulence deals with the manifestation of turbulence in quantum fluids,