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New Photonic Molecules Discovered

Scientists led by Harvard professor Mikhail Lukin and MIT professor Vladan Vuletić have created a never-before-seen form of matter by binding together photons into molecules using a cloud of rubidium atoms cooled to near absolute zero. The photons interacted strongly enough with each other to behave as if they had mass and formed stable pairs that exited the cloud together as single units. This breakthrough could help develop quantum computers by allowing photons to process information through interactions not previously possible.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views3 pages

New Photonic Molecules Discovered

Scientists led by Harvard professor Mikhail Lukin and MIT professor Vladan Vuletić have created a never-before-seen form of matter by binding together photons into molecules using a cloud of rubidium atoms cooled to near absolute zero. The photons interacted strongly enough with each other to behave as if they had mass and formed stable pairs that exited the cloud together as single units. This breakthrough could help develop quantum computers by allowing photons to process information through interactions not previously possible.

Uploaded by

Atul Dwivedi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Seeing Light in a New Light: Scientists Create NeverBefore-Seen Form of Matter

Sep. 25, 2013 Harvard and MIT scientists are challenging the conventional wisdom about light, and they didn't need to go to a galaxy far, far away to do it.

Working with colleagues at the Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms, a group led ! Harvard "rofessor of "h!sics Mikhail #ukin and MIT "rofessor of "h!sics $ladan $uletic have managed to coa% photons into inding together to form molecules -- a state of matter that, until recentl!, had een purel! theoretical& The work is descri ed in a 'eptem er () paper in Nature&

The discover!, #ukin said, runs contrar! to decades of accepted wisdom a out the nature of light& "hotons have long een descri ed as massless particles which don*t interact with each other -- shine two laser eams at each other, he said, and the! simpl! pass through one another& +"hotonic molecules,+ however, ehave less like traditional lasers and more like something !ou might find in science fiction -- the light sa er& +Most of the properties of light we know a out originate from the fact that photons are massless, and that the! do not interact with each other,+ #ukin said& +What we have done is create a special t!pe of medium in which photons interact with each other so strongl! that the! egin to act as though the! have mass, and the! ind together to form molecules& This t!pe of photonic ound state has een discussed theoreticall! for ,uite a while, ut until now it hadn*t een o served& +It*s not an in-apt analog! to compare this to light sa ers,+ #ukin added& +When these photons interact with each other, the!*re pushing against and deflect each other& The ph!sics of what*s happening in these molecules is similar to what we see in the movies&+ To get the normall!-massless photons to ind to each other, #ukin and colleagues, including Harvard post-doctoral fellow -fer .ister erg, former Harvard doctoral student Ale%e! /orshkov and MIT graduate students Thi ault "e!ronel and 0iu #iang couldn*t rel! on something like the .orce -- the! instead turned to a set of more e%treme conditions& 1esearchers egan ! pumped ru idium atoms into a vacuum cham er, then used lasers to cool the cloud of atoms to 2ust a few degrees a ove a solute 3ero& Using e%tremel! weak laser pulses, the! then fired single photons into the cloud of atoms& As the photons enter the cloud of cold atoms, #ukin said, its energ! e%cites atoms along its path, causing the photon to slow dramaticall!& As the photon moves through the cloud, that energ! is handed off from atom to atom, and eventuall! e%its the cloud with the photon& +When the photon e%its the medium, its identit! is preserved,+ #ukin said& +It*s the same effect we see with refraction of light in a water glass& The light enters the water, it hands off part of its energ! to the medium, and inside it e%ists as light and matter coupled together, ut when it e%its, it*s still light& The process that takes place is the same it*s 2ust a it more e%treme -- the light is slowed considera l!, and a lot more energ! is given awa! than during refraction&+ When #ukin and colleagues fired two photons into the cloud, the! were surprised to see them e%it together, as a single molecule& The reason the! form the never- efore-seen molecules4 An effect called a 1!d erg lockade, #ukin said, which states that when an atom is e%cited, near ! atoms cannot e e%cited to the same degree& In practice, the effect

means that as two photons enter the atomic cloud, the first e%cites an atom, ut must move forward efore the second photon can e%cite near ! atoms& The result, he said, is that the two photons push and pull each other through the cloud as their energ! is handed off from one atom to the ne%t& +It*s a photonic interaction that*s mediated ! the atomic interaction,+ #ukin said& +That makes these two photons ehave like a molecule, and when the! e%it the medium the!*re much more likel! to do so together than as single photons&+ While the effect is unusual, it does have some practical applications as well& +We do this for fun, and ecause we*re pushing the frontiers of science,+ #ukin said& +5ut it feeds into the igger picture of what we*re doing ecause photons remain the est possi le means to carr! ,uantum information& The handicap, though, has een that photons don*t interact with each other&+ To uild a ,uantum computer, he e%plained, researchers need to uild a s!stem that can preserve ,uantum information, and process it using ,uantum logic operations& The challenge, however, is that ,uantum logic re,uires interactions etween individual ,uanta so that ,uantum s!stems can e switched to perform information processing& +What we demonstrate with this process allows us to do that,+ #ukin said& +5efore we make a useful, practical ,uantum switch or photonic logic gate we have to improve the performance, so it*s still at the proof-of-concept level, ut this is an important step& The ph!sical principles we*ve esta lished here are important&+ The s!stem could even e useful in classical computing, #ukin said, considering the power-dissipation challenges chip-makers now face& A num er of companies -including I5M -- have worked to develop s!stems that rel! on optical routers that convert light signals into electrical signals, ut those s!stems face their own hurdles& #ukin also suggested that the s!stem might one da! even e used to create comple% three-dimensional structures -- such as cr!stals -- wholl! out of light& +What it will e useful for we don*t know !et, ut it*s a new state of matter, so we are hopeful that new applications ma! emerge as we continue to investigate these photonic molecules* properties,+ he said&

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