Number 650 #1, August 20, 2003 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Giant Helium Molecules
Giant helium molecules, containing only two atoms but assuming a size
as large as a small virus, have been created by researchers at the École
Normale Supérieure in Paris. At sizes ranging from 10 to 100
nanometers, these helium molecules are the largest diatomic (two-atom)
molecules ever created by a factor of 5 (and comparable to the size
of viruses, which vary in length from 5-300 nm). What's more, helium
is an inert gas that does not normally form molecules. To observe the
new giant molecular states, one needs to start from an ultracold gas
of atoms. At the École Normale Supérieure, researchers
trap a cloud of helium atoms with magnetic fields. Each helium atom
is in a long-lived "metastable" state and carries nearly 20
eV of internal energy, which is more than 10 billion times its average
energy of motion. In the confines of a magnetic trap, the hottest He
atoms evaporate and the colder atoms remain, lowering the temperature
of the cloud to 10 microkelvins (millionths of a degree above absolute
zero). Then, a laser pairs up He atoms through a process called "photoassociation,"
in which light of a precise color changes the state of the atoms so
that they attract each other more strongly. This attraction comes about
through light-induced "dipoles" (momentary separations of
positive and negative charge in each He) to cause the atoms to bind
to each other. To detect the molecules, the researchers record a temperature
rise in the cloud that results from the successful absorption of the
laser light. In a typical experiment, one percent of the atoms absorbs
the light, corresponding to the formation of about 100,000 molecules.
In each of the molecules, the atoms are sufficiently far apart that
they resist destructive "auto-ionization" effects, in which
an electron jumps from one atom to the other and breaks apart the molecule.
In fact, the atoms are so distant from each other that the researchers
had to account for the finite speed of light: each atom of the pair
sees the other the way it was a femtosecond earlier. The researchers
had to include this "retardation" effect in their calculations
to get agreement with the measured data. The molecules last for an average
of 50 nanoseconds--a remarkably long time due to the huge amounts of
internal energy in each He atom. In precisely measuring the forces that
bind the molecule, the researchers can obtain detailed information about
the helium atom. In addition, the metastable helium molecule can sensitively
test the accuracy of calculations in quantum chemistry, the application
of quantum mechanics to chemical systems such as molecules. (Léonard
et al., Physical Review Letters,15 August 2003; contact
Allard Mosk, or Jérémie
Léonard).