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Physics News Update
Number 516 , December 14, 2000 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein

Integrated Atom Optics

What electrons are for electronics and photons are for photonics, neutral atoms will be for some future "atom-tronics." That is, chilled trapped atoms will be manipulated on or near a planar microchip in such a way as to process information, especially if atoms in their wavelike manifestation can be brought into interference with each other.

In recent years there have been many advances in this hot research area: atoms have been guided along wires (Update 416, ), through waveguides (Update 469), and steered around (and slightly above) a microchip under the influence of patterned currents in the nearby surface (Update 486). And as for atom interferometry, it has been used to measure previously unknown scattering properties of matter waves (Update 209), detect subtle changes in gravitational gradients (Update 384), and used to demonstrate the wave properties of C-60 molecules (Update 453).

Three new innovations come from labs in Germany, Austria, and France. Joerg Schmiedmayer (49-622-154-9325, joerg.schmiedmayer@physl.uni-heidelberg.de) of the University of Heidelberg (recently moved from the University of Innsbruck) and his colleagues have achieved essentially a planar beamsplitter by guiding atoms a few microns above a microstructured surface (an Atom Chip) along a Y-shaped magnetic wave guide (see Physics News Graphics). Depending on how current is sent through the Y, atoms can be directed either to the left arm, to the right arm, or to both output arms with any desired ratio. By the way, the atoms themselves can be positioned with 100-nm control (the accuracy of the nanofabrication techniques) and can be made to sort of go around bends; as with light in fibers, there is some loss of atoms if their trajectory is bent too sharply (Cassettari et al., Physical Review Letters, 25 December 2000).

Another group, at the Max Planck Institute in Munich, moves atom clouds around and above a lithographic conductor pattern on a wafer, what they call a "magnetic conveyor belt." Unlike a guide, the conveyor belt transports atom clouds (800 nm across) in separate potential wells, keeping them confined in all three dimensions, allowing velocity control and ultra-precise positioning. The conveyer belt would be useful for doing interferometry experiments (especially if Bose-Einstein condensates could be transported), for "atomic ink jet printing," and as part of some future "atom coupled device," which would use atoms for performing measurements much as charge coupled devices (CCD) use electrons for imaging light fields (Hansel et al., upcoming article in Physical Review Letters; Wolfgang Hansel, wolfgang.haensel@mpq.mpg.de, 49-892-180-3937).

Meanwhile at the University of Paris-South, Laurence Pruvost (33-169-35-2100, laurence.pruvost@lac.u-psud.fr) and her students have generated a beam of guided rubidium atoms from a magneto-optic trap (MOT). The atoms are shepherded by the electric fields of a laser beam. The atoms then meet with a second beam of laser light at an oblique angle. The crossed laser beams generate two collimated atom beams making an angle of 7 degrees. Because the beamsplitter is energy selective, it might be used to help evaporate atoms of higher energy from clouds in an atom trap (Houde et al., Physical Review Letters, 25 Dec.) Cassettari et al. and Houde et al. are available at Physics News Select Article; Hansel et al. is not yet in pdf format but we can fax it to you.

Dripping From Faucets and Ceilings

Understanding dripping better can bring about such things as higher-quality inkjet printing and more uniform deposition of DNA onto gene chips. Solving the fundamental Navier-Stokes fluid equations (involving such variables as fluid velocity and pressure) for a single drop from a faucet and then observing dripping with a fast camera to determine the equations' essential features, Purdue researchers (Osman Basaran, 765-494-4061, obasaran@ecn.purdue.edu) have implemented a streamlined model that enables computers to simulate sequences of hundreds of drops. (Previous Navier-Stokes-based approaches have only been able to consider the genesis of a single drop.)

Among the team's observations: as flow rate increases, a phenomenon known as "period doubling" can occur, in which drops make a transition from falling at a single time interval (such as every 5 seconds) to two characteristic intervals (such as 4 s followed by 2 s). The authors also predict the possibility of a (yet-to-be-observed) hysteresis effect, in which the previous history of the flow can influence the subsequent dripping pattern. (Ambravaneswaran et al., Phys. Rev Lett., 18 Dec.)

On the heels of the new dripping model comes an experiment showing how to prevent drips from a ceiling. Spreading a layer of silicone oil on the underside of a flat surface suspended above a gas layer, University of Texas researchers (Harry Swinney, 512-471-4619, swinney@chaos.ph.utexas.edu) found that making the bottom of the gas layer about 10 degrees warmer than the top of the liquid layer could prevent dripping from occurring for weeks at a time. Normally, the smallest disturbance to such a liquid layer creates unstable variations in thickness along the layer, which leads to dripping. But the Texas researchers showed that heating the gas layer can warm up the thicker regions of the liquid layer. Since surface tension decreases with increasing temperature, oil gets pulled along the gas-liquid interface from the warmer regions of lower surface tension to the colder regions of higher surface tension. Thus, heating from below can restore and stabilize the flat boundary between the liquid and the gas.

This work can provide insights for designing more uniform coatings on materials. (Burgess et al., upcoming paper in Phys. Rev. Lett.)    

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