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Number 412, January 27, 1999 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein
ELEMENT 114, representing the beachhead of what might be an "island of stability" among heavy nuclei, has been successfully created, according to scientists at Russia's Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna. Artificially made elements heavier than uranium are generally unstable, but theorists have for some time thought that for elements in the vicinity of number 114 and above might well possess a configuration of neutrons and protons that makes for longer life. The Dubna result seems to be evidence for this. Made by shooting atoms of calcium-48 into a target of plutonium-244, atoms of element 114 (with a nuclear weight of 289) were detected through their decay into element 112. The lifetimes for elements 114 and 112 are 30 seconds and 280 msec, respectively. Element 113 has not yet been discovered. (News items in Science, 22 January 1999.)
QUANTUM HOLOGRAPHY, in which a pair of laser pulses reveals detailed information about an atom's state, has been used for the first time to control the shape of an atom wave, advancing prospects for tailoring an atom's exact properties. Classical holography, which makes 3D pictures, involves the use of an "object" and a "reference" laser beam. How these beams combine in a piece of film provides information on their relationship (specifically, their relative "phases"), allowing the eyes to build up a 3D scene. In quantum holography, an ultrashort laser pulse (playing the role of an object beam) first puts an atom into a combination of wavelike states, forming a "wavepacket." Shortly thereafter, a subsequent pulse (acting as the reference beam) creates a second wavepacket within the atom. These two wavepackets interfere. Ionizing the atoms and then measuring them at a detector can provide information about the phase relationships between the wavepackets, ultimately yielding details on the individual wavelike states. University of Michigan researchers (Tom Weinacht, 734-764-2344) have now demonstrated a feedback approach, in which they shine a pair of pulses on a gas of cesium atoms, measure the effect, and modify subsequent pairs of pulses until they get the cesium wavepacket they want. Such "wavepacket engineering" may enable scientists to prepare atoms and molecules which undergo precisely desired chemical reactions. (Weinacht et al., Nature, 21 January 1999; see also Physical Review Focus, 23 June 1998.)
THE ADVANCED COMPOSITION EXPLORER (ACE) satellite measures isotope and ionization abundances in the solar wind. On two recent occasions (6 Nov 1997 and 2-3 May 1998) explosions on the sun spewed clouds of particles whose isotope profiles departed from the norm. For the Nov 1997 event, for instance, the presence of higher-than-normal ionized states of certain isotopes indicated that regions of hotter-than-normal portions of the solar corona were involved, and this in turn suggested that several particle-acceleration mechanisms were operating in the sun's atmosphere. The May 1998 event featured charge states, such as triply ionized oxygen and nitrogen, not seen before in solar wind. These comparatively modestly ionized atoms are indicative of the relatively cool (100,000 K) gas in solar prominences; this cooler gas must have gotten caught up in the much hotter coronal- mass-ejection material making its way toward ACE. (Series of articles in the 15 January 1999 issue of Geophysical Research Letters.)
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