Freeze!
Stopping light in it's tracks. This time, we keep
the photons intact! (Not like 2 years ago)
Light
'frozen' in its tracks
A pulse of light has been stopped in
its tracks with all its photons intact, reveal US
physicists.
In a vacuum, light
travels at the phenomenal speed of 300,000,000 metres per second. Scientists can
exploit the way that the electric and magnetic fields in light interact with
matter to slow it down.
Over the
last few years, scientists have become masters of the light beam. Speeds of a
few metres per second are now reached routinely in laboratories around the
world. It is rather harder, however, to stop light completely and previous
attempts have halted light but lost its photons in the
process.
Mikhail Lukin and
colleagues at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts managed to stop
light without this loss by firing a short burst of red laser light into a gas of
hot rubidium atoms.
This is then
"frozen" with the help of two control beams. The light in the control beams
interacts with the rubidium atoms to create layers that alternately transmit and
reflect the pulse.
As the signal
tries to propagate through these layers, the photons bounce backwards and
forwards between them. As a result, the pulse makes no forward progress - the
light is "frozen" in place. The pulse is set free when the control beams are
turned off.
Ulf Leonhardt at the
University of St Andrews in Fife, Scotland, says the technique is novel in that
the effect the control beams have is "like storing light behind
bars".
Fractions
of a millisecond
In 2001, two groups reported they had
stopped light (New Scientist 08/08/01). Lukin was involved in
one of these experiments, the other was led by Lene Hau, now at
Harvard.Both teams slowed light
down by passing it through a gas of atoms. Lukin used hot rubidium atoms, Hau
super-cooled sodium. Both managed to reduce the speed of light to zero however,
by the time it had slowed to a halt, all of the photons had been absorbed. The
pulse could be regenerated because the photons' energy was stored in the atoms.
But while the pulse was stationary, technically, it contained no light at
all.Lukin and colleagues Michal
Bajscy and Alexander Zibrov have so far managed to hold light still for just
fractions of a millisecond using their new method. But there is no reason why it
cannot be trapped for longer, they suggest. This could be a useful trick to
employ in telecommunications systems that send optical signals, or more
fancifully, in quantum
computers."Frozen, stationary
pulses of light mark a new chapter in quantum optics," comments Marlan Scully at
Princeton University, New Jersey in
Nature.Journal
reference: Nature (vol 426, p 638)
Posted: Wed - December
10, 2003 at 09:11 PM