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Experimental observation of violent relaxation

Physics

Experimental observation of violent relaxation

M. C. Braidotti, M. Lovisetto, et al.

A groundbreaking optical experiment has directly observed the phenomenon of violent relaxation, a process crucial to understanding the formation of structures in the universe. Conducted by a team of researchers including Maria Chiara Braidotti and her colleagues, this study offers a fresh perspective on how galaxy formation can be mirrored through controlled optical dynamics.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Structures in the Universe, ranging from globular clusters to entire galaxies, are not described by standard statistical mechanics at equilibrium. Instead, they are formed through a process of a very different nature, called violent relaxation that is now known to be possible also in other systems that exhibit long-range interactions. This mechanism was proposed theoretically and modelled numerically, but never directly observed in any physical system. Here, we develop a table-top experiment allowing us to directly observe violent relaxation in an optical setting. The resulting optical dynamics can also be likened to the formation of an analogue 2D-galaxy through the analogy of the underlying equations, where we can control a range of parameters, including the nonlocal interacting potential, allowing us to emulate the physics of gravitational quantum and classical dark matter models.
Publisher
Communications Physics
Published On
Jun 26, 2024
Authors
Maria Chiara Braidotti, Martino Lovisetto, Radivoje Prizia, Claire Michel, Clamond Didier, Matthieu Bellec, Ewan M. Wright, Bruno Marcos, Daniele Faccio
Tags
violent relaxation
optical experiment
galaxy formation
dark matter
gravitational models
2D dynamics
cosmology
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