Padavic, KarmelaSun, KueiLannert, CourtneyVishveshwara, Smitha2018-10-172018-10-172018-01-112018-10-170295-5075http://hdl.handle.net/10735.1/6201Full text access from Treasures at UT Dallas is restricted to current UTD affiliates.Bose-Einstein condensate shells, while occurring in ultracold systems of coexisting phases and potentially within neutron stars, have yet to be realized in isolation on Earth due to the experimental challenge of overcoming gravitational sag. Motivated by the expected realization of hollow condensates by the space-based Cold Atomic Laboratory in microgravity conditions, we study a spherical condensate undergoing a topological change from a filled sphere to a hollow shell. We argue that the collective modes of the system show marked and robust signatures of this hollowing transition accompanied by the appearance of a new boundary. In particular, we demonstrate that the frequency spectrum of the breathing modes shows a pronounced depression as it evolves from the filled-sphere limit to the hollowing transition. Furthermore, when the center of the system becomes hollow surface modes show a global restructuring of their spectrum due to the availability of a new, inner, surface for supporting density distortions. We pinpoint universal features of this topological transition as well as analyse the spectral evolution of collective modes in the experimentally relevant case of a bubble-trap.en©2018 EPLACollective excitationsReduced gravity environmentsBose-Einstein condensationPhysics of Hollow Bose-Einstein CondensatesarticlePadavic, Karmela, Kuei Sun, Courtney Lannert, and Smitha Vishveshwara. 2017. "Physics of hollow Bose-Einstein condensates." EPL 120(2), doi:10.1209/0295-5075/120/200041202