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Physics News Update
Number 624, February 13, 2003 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein

A Pinpoint Precision MAP

A pinpoint precision map of the cosmic microwave background, reported this week at a press conference by scientists associated with the orbiting Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), brings the early universe into sharper focus.

The credibility of WMAP's pronouncement rests on three things: its angular resolution is some 40 times better than that of its microwave predecessor, the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE); it comprehensively surveyed the entire sky for a whole year (3 more years of data is yet to come); and it measures the polarization of the microwave radiation; the orientation of the radiation arises partly from the last scattering of light at the time of "recombination," when stable atoms formed for the first time, and partly from the time when ultraviolet radiation strewn by the first generation of stars ionized once again a lot of atoms in space.

Here are a few of the salient numbers coming out of the WMAP analysis:

  • the time of recombination was 380,000 years after the big bang
  • the era of the first stars was about 200 million years after the big bang (surprisingly early)
  • the age of the universe is 13.7 billion years
  • the accounting of matter in the universe is as follows: atomic matter makes up about 4%, dark matter about 23%, and dark energy 73%.

(For more information, see: WMAP Webpage; NASA Goddard Press Release)

Salt: The Movie

Solid, liquid, melting, and freezing are concepts that refer to bulk matter, and not to individual atoms. But what about a cluster of a dozen atoms?

Louis Bloomfield (University of Virginia) has assembled a nano-sized grain of salt, a seven-atom blob of consisting of 4 cesium atoms and 3 iodide atoms. Compare this to an ordinary salt grain, with a size of 0.2 mm and about 1.5 million atoms along each side of its cubical structure.

By spraying this cluster with picosecond pulses of light, Bloomfield has been able to make a "movie" of sorts showing how the cluster rearranges its geometry: sometimes a 2 x 2 x 2 cube, sometimes a flat 2 x 4 ladder, sometimes an octagonal ring, all by virtue of the cluster's own internal thermal energy; they don't image the cluster directly, but their locations can be inferred from a mixture of measurement and theory (for figures and cool movie, see http://rabi.phys.virginia.edu/research/ ). Separate laser pulses are used to heat or to view the clusters.

One outcome of the experiment: "melting" of the tiny crystal begins at a "temperature" of 225 C rather than 626 C, the melting temperature of the bulk material. Studies like this are pertinent to the production of nm-sized circuitry since one should know whether a wire or some other structure will retain its basic shape or shift into something else over time. (Dally and Bloomfield, Physical Review Letters, 14 February 2003, bloomfield@virginia.edu, 434-924-4576; see also How Things Work: The Physics of Everyday Life, chapter 15)

Ultraviolet Lithography

Ultraviolet lithography can produce lines for integrated circuits as small as 39 nm in one recent test. To help sustain Moore's law and cram more and more gates and memory units into a given space, manufacturers of microchips must make the lines in their circuitry ever smaller. This usually means working with a shorter-wavelength light beam for creating the patterns used for inscribing fine features on silicon or metal surfaces. The form of lithography currently in mass production now can produce a half-pitch size (equal lines and spaces in between) of 90 nm and isolated line widths of 65 nm. To produce a later generation after that you would need even shorter wavelengths.

At the Advanced Light Source at the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (LBNL) a government-industry consortium of scientists is trying out this future lithography. Using a beam of synchrotron radiation in the extreme ultraviolet range they have produced 70-nm line/space intervals and isolated lines 39 nm wide (see figure). By the time this type of lithography comes into play, by about 2007, these numbers should be 45 and 25 nm, respectively. The consortium consists of a government side, the "Virtual National Lab" (LBNL, Livermore, and Sandia), and an industrial component comprising Intel, AMD, IBM, Infineon, Micron, and Motorola. (Naulleau et al., Journal of Vacuum Science Technology B, Nov/Dec 2002; contact Patrick Naulleau, pnaulleau@lbl.gov)