Posted on 04/10/2002 9:14:29 AM PDT by Texaggie79
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Right: Fiber optics. © Lawrence Manning.
The laser pulse was kilometers-long before it entered the cell, yet the pulse fit intact within the centimeters-wide chamber. Sound like magic? Perhaps ... but it was only quantum mechanics. Quantum mechanics describes the bizarre rules of light and matter on atomic scales. In that realm, matter can be in two places at once. Objects can be particles and waves at the same time. And nothing is certain -- only probable or improbable. This improbable feat -- stopping light -- was accomplished by two teams. One was led by Ron Walsworth, a physicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the other by Lene Hau of Harvard University's Department of Physics. Walsworth's group used warm rubidium vapors to pause their laser beam; Hau's group used a super-cold sodium gas to do the same thing. Below: Before she managed to stop light altogether, Lene Hau and colleagues first slowed it to bicycle speeds in 1999. [more]
The technique requires two lasers: a "control laser" and a "signal laser." The signal laser is the one to be stopped. Using the control laser, Walsworth's team caused rubidium gas in the glass cell to become "dispersive" -- in other words, the velocity of light passing through the gas depended sensitively on the color of the light. (Prisms work much the same way, although the analogy is not exact.) In such a dispersive gas, atoms and photons interact strongly, says Walsworth. "Effectively dragged down by strong interactions with atoms, the photons slowed to a crawl." Physicists call such an atom-photon system a "polariton." Next they reduced the intensity of the signal laser until the polariton was 100% atomic. There were no photons left inside the chamber. Yet the imprint of the photons remained -- on the atoms themselves. Like a child's top, atoms spin. (Physicists say they "carry angular momentum.") Information describing the fading laser pulse was stored, like a code, in the up-and-down patterns of the atoms' spin axes.
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Above: As the laser pulse enters the chamber containing the rubidium vapor, the information that defines the light becomes imprinted on the atoms' spin states (indicated by the small arrows). In the moment that the light is "stopped," only the spin states exist. This image by Tony Phillips is based on another from the American Institute of Physics. Freeing such a stored pulse is easy: another laser beam directed through the chamber can release it. "In the near future, this technique may enable efficient, reversible mapping of quantum information between light and atoms," says Walsworth.
Right: Ron Walsworth, Harvard Center for Astrophysics. Quantum communication might someday be used for sending ultra-secure messages. One of the quintessential traits of the quantum world is that observing a system actually alters that system's properties. In other words, it would be impossible to "touch" a quantum message without leaving "fingerprints." "So there's no way to intercept messages, break the code, send them on, and have the receiver not know about it," Walsworth says. Does this seem familiar? It might to fans of Star Trek. Every time Capt. Kirk uses his transporter to visit an alien planet, distant atoms are re-arranged by a beam of something like light to match his body's molecular pattern back on board the Enterprise -- a far-out example of "quantum communication." Star Trek transporters will remain fiction for a long time to come, say researchers. Even so, stopping light might be a tiny first step toward them.
Left: A fanciful illustration of qubits. Courtesy of the Centre for Quantum Computation. Such a computer would work only if there were some way to stop light, change its state, and send it on its way again. Walsworth's team has demonstrated just such a sequence: While a light pulse was imprinted on the rubidium atoms, they made a simple change to the atoms' quantum states. Much to the researchers' delight, those changes were present in the regenerated light pulse.
Right: Supercomputer. © Roger Ressmeyer. Maybe not: A group led by Phillip Hemmer of Hanscom Air Force Base (he is now at Texas A&M University) has shown that light can be stopped as well by solids. They used a rare-earth doped insulator -- a type of material generally used for ultra-high density optical memories and processors. "It's very nice to think that it works in a solid state, which is moving more towards the electronics that we're familiar with," Walsworth says. In a strange new world where scientists can stop light, hold it, and release it at will -- familiar is good. |
According to the article, nothing remains but the altered
spin states, which later are used to create photons. That's
what stops me. Spin states as the source of photons.
I guess it is like the potential energy imparted to an electron
when you run a laser. I see plasma flashlights that are
recharged at a laser station.
Please don't laugh to hard at this stupid question, my minor was in archaeology not physics.
a. cricket
I call these things "Stupid Physicist Tricks." They are nothing more than stunts intended to get the author(s) in the headlines.
--Boris
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