Number 235, July 28, 1995 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein
A MAGNETIC MIRROR FOR CHILLY ATOMS has been demonstrated, allowing researchers
to manipulate cold atoms in a new way, and possibly bringing about a novel
method for exploring the wavelike nature of atoms. Edward Hinds (203-432-3826)
and his coworkers at Yale built their mirror using a commonplace material:
strips of audio tape recorded with a sinusoidally varying magnetic field
pattern. A supply of atoms--a rubidium-85 gas--is trapped and cooled with
a combination of laser light and magnetic fields in a configuration similar
to that used to create Bose-Einstein condensation (Update 233). The magneto-optic
trap not only helps to cool the atoms but also orients the atoms' magnetic
moments (the atoms can be thought of as tiny bar magnets). Cooled to a
temperature of about 30 millionths of a degree above absolute zero, the
atoms are then dropped onto the tape from a height of one inch. The magnetic
interaction between the atom and the tiny domains in the tape causes the
atoms to bounce back up in an orderly way. In fact, the atoms can bounce
repeatedly (or even be recaptured in the trap). Such mirrors are needed
for carrying out "atom optics," the manipulation of atoms just
as light waves are manipulated by lenses and mirrors in conventional optics.
Unlike a previously demonstrated atom mirror (Update 149), the Yale mirror
does not use laser light to reflect the atoms. (T.M. Roach et al, Physical
Review Letters, 24 July 1995.) At a June laser spectroscopy meeting in
Capri, Italy, Hinds announced that the Yale team is now using a new medium
for magnetic mirrors, floppy disks, from which they made a converging mirror.
The researchers sealed the disk across the open end of a tube, and evacuated
the air from the tube. The suction made the disk bow inward, forming a
concave surface able to focus reflected atoms into a single point. Future
possibilities also include using magnetic mirrors to construct a "reflection
grating" for atoms in order to study their wavelike properties.
THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS HOMEPAGE (address: http://www.aip.org)
is one of many starting points for finding physics information on the World
Wide Web. The following is a brief sketch of what you can find there. First
of all, the current Physics News Update and past issues going back through
1993 can be retrieved. Physics Today offers an extensive calendar enumerating
upcoming physics meetings worldwide. Links to the homepages of various
societies, such as the American Geophysical Union and The American Physical
Society, include useful information on membership, meetings, journals,
and jobs. Through the European Physical Society one can access national
physics homepages and through these individual institutes, some with detailed
updates on recent research and publications. The table of contents of this
week's issue of Science can be had from the AAAS homepage. A section called
"Physics Around the World Index", organized by McGill University,
surveys physics research areas in branches of ever greater specificity;
for example, under condensed matter physics there is a subsection about
the Texas Center for Superconductivity, which in turn displays a nice tutorial
on high-temperature superconductivity. More Worldwide Physics homepages
lead to theoretical physics institutes worldwide, physics consulting firms,
markets for secondhand instruments, lists of fundamental constants, overviews
of various physics laws, a guide to graduate physics departments in the
U.S. (faculties, facilities, research areas, etc.), and a section on educational
resources, such as frequently asked questions in physics, a table of the
nuclides, links to USENET physics bulletin boards, and other physics newsletters.
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