Researchers now able to stop, restart light
By William J. Cromie
Gazette Staff
|
Lene Hau and her colleagues created a
new form of matter to bring a light beam to a complete stop, then restart it
again. (Staff photo by Kris Snibbe) |
"Two years ago we slowed it
down to 38 miles an hour; now we've been able to park it then bring it back up
to full speed." Lene Hau isn't talking about a used motorbike, but about
light – that ethereal, life-sustaining stuff that normally travels 93 million
miles from the sun in about eight minutes.
Less than five years ago, the speed of light was considered
one of the universe's great constants.
Hau, 41, a professor of physics at Harvard, admits that the
famous genius would "probably be stunned" at the results of her
experiments. Working at the Rowland Institute for Science, overlooking the
"It's nifty to look into the chamber and see a clump
of ultracold atoms floating there," Hau says. "In this odd state,
light takes on a more human dimension; you can almost touch it."
She and her team continued to tweak their system until they
finally brought light to a complete stop. The light dims as it slows down, so
you think that it's being turned out. Then Hau shoots a yellow-orange laser
beam into the cloud of atoms, and the light emerges at full speed and
intensity.
Inspired by Hau's success at slowing light, researchers
working on a wooded hill a few miles away at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics (CfA) used a similar technique to stop, then restart, a light
beam. That team was headed by
"We didn't have much contact," she notes,
"just a few e-mails."
Stopping
cold
Besides stirring a research rush to explore exotic forms of
matter, such experiments open the door to some practical applications. These
include vastly more powerful computers as well as the possibility of
communications that are much more secure from hackers and people trying to
steal your credit and bank card numbers.
"We hope for wonderful things," says David
Phillips, who worked on the CfA "stop light" project. "Our
imagination hasn't figured out what the possibilities are yet."
Hau, a tall, slender scientist educated as a theoretical
physicist in
Hau was one of several researchers who succeeded in
creating this novel state of matter. She corresponded with a colleague, Stepen
Harris at Stanford University, and they came up with the idea that it might be
possible to use a small ball of cold atoms to slow down light.
Hau and her group then figured out a way to make it work.
Using sodium atoms and two laser beams, they made a new kind of medium that
entangles light and slows it down. The laser beams glow yellow-orange like
sodium streetlights, and the cigar-shaped cloud of atoms is about
eight-thousandths of an inch long and about a third as wide.
Working with Chien Liu, a postdoctoral fellow at Rowland,
and Harvard graduate students Zachary Dutton and Cyrus Behroozi, Hau kept
tweaking the atoms until they completely stopped laser light. This happens when
a second laser beam directed at right angles to the cloud of atoms is cut off.
When that laser is switched on again, it abruptly frees the light from the trap
and it goes on its way.
Hau explains that light entering the atomic entanglement
transfers its energy to the atoms. Light energy raises the atoms to higher
energy levels in ways that depend on the frequency and intensity of the light.
The laser illuminating the cloud at right angles to the incoming beam acts like
a parking brake, stopping the beam inside the cloud when it is shut off. When
it is turned on again, the brake is released, the atoms transfer their energy
back to the light, and it leaves the end of the cloud at full speed and
intensity.
Hau's team stopped light for one-thousandth of a second.
Atomically speaking, "this is an amazingly long time," Hau notes.
"But we think it can be stopped for much longer."
The CfA researchers used an easier method. They shot laser
beams through a dense cloud of rubidium and helium gas. (Rubidium, in its solid
or natural form, is a soft, silver-white metal.) The light bounced from atom to
atom, gradually slowing down until it stopped. No supervacuum or ultra-cold was
needed. In fact, the chamber where the light stopped was at a temperature of
176 degrees F.
This convenience comes at a cost, however. Only half of the
incoming light was stored, then recovered, and the storage time was much
shorter.
Think of both contraptions as sophisticated light switches
that control not just light but information. Incoming light can carry information
expressed by changes or modulations of its frequency, amplitude, and phase.
When the light stops, that information is stored just like information is
stored in the electronic memory of a computer. To access the information, you
turn on a control laser, and out it comes.
Shrinking
computers
Computers operating by these so-called quantum effects are
much more efficient that those available today, or even on the drawing board.
("Quantum" refers to changes in the energy levels of the atoms.)
Today's machines represent information in bits, electronic combinations of
zeros and ones. Bits represented by quantum states of atoms could carry much,
much more information. Cubic inch for cubic inch, quantum computers could
tackle problems that would stymie the most super of conventional computers. For
example, they could perform many calculations simultaneously.
Another thing they could do would be to encrypt information
in complex codes impossible to crack without extremely expensive and
time-consuming methods. Financial and other information would be prodigiously
safer with a quantum computer.
As marvelous as they are, however, both the Rowland and CfA
systems take up more space and power than would be practical. Hau's experiment
requires a small room, CfA's needs a large tabletop.
CfA researchers need to solve this problem and to make sure
all the light is stored – not just half. That will take many years.
Hau has already started ordering and installing equipment
with which she plans to construct a quantum light stopper no bigger than a
fingernail. She envisions ultracold and supervacuums being achieved with
devices less than one-thousandth of an inch in size. These would be built on
chips no bigger than the Pentium IV that runs many of today's small laptop and
palm-sized computers.
"Wouldn't that be nifty!" Hau says. She and her
colleagues describe their experiment in detail in today's issue of the journal
Nature.