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Physics News Update
Number 842, October 9, 2007 by Phil Schewe

2007 Nobel Prize in Physics

Peter Grünberg
Peter Grünberg of Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Institut für Festkkörperforschung in Germany. Image (c) Forschungszentrum Jülich
Albert Fert
Albert Fert of Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS/ THALES, Université Paris-Sud in France. Image (c) CNRS Photolibrary - C. Lebedinsky.
 

 

The 2007 Nobel Prize in Physics will be awarded to Albert Fert (Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France) and Peter Grünberg (Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany) for the discovery of giant magnetoresistance, or GMR for short. GMR is the process whereby a tiny magnetic field, such as that of an oriented domain on the surface of a computer hard drive can, when the proper read head is brought nearby, trigger a large change in electrical resistance, thus “reading” the data vested in the magnetic orientation.

This is the heart of modern hard drive technology and makes possible the immense hard-drive data storage industry. Fert and Grünberg pioneered the making of stacks consisting of alternating thin layers of magnetic and non-magnetic atoms needed to produce the GMR effect. GMR is a prominent example of how quantum effects (a large electrical response to a tiny magnetic input) come about through confinement (the atomic layers being so thin.); that is, atoms interact differently with each other when they are confined to a tiny volume or a thin plane.

All these magnetic interactions involve the spin of an electron. Spin is a quantum attribute that shouldn’t be associated too closely in the mind with the electron literally spinning (in the way that a top spins). Still more innovative technology can be expected through quantum effects depending on electrons’ spin.

Most of the electronics industry is based on manipulating the charges of electrons moving through circuits. But the electrons’ spins might also be exploited to gain new control over data storage and processing. Spintronics is the general name for this budding branch of electronics. (Nobel Prize website: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2007/info.html)

Read the Inside Science story
Read AIP Journal Articles from Albert Fert and Peter Grünberg

New Theory Explains How Cellular Compasses Work

Scientists from the Politecnico di Torino in Italy and the Landau Institute of Theoretical Physics in Russia have derived a theory to describe how eukaryotic cells (such as those found in all higher organisms) respond to chemical signals in their environments. Considering that coordinated sensing of and movement toward chemical signals is a vital processes in embryology (how cells know where to go in fashioning the organism), inflammation, and immune response, directional maneuvering at the cellular level is quite important. Here's what happens.

First, receptors in the membranes of the cells become activated by the presence of trace amounts of chemicals---even down to the nano-molar level or about one molecule in a cubic micron---in the cells' vicinity. Not only do the receptors sense the presence of the attractants but, through the differential activation of 10,000 or more receptors distributed along the body of the cell, the direction of the source of the attractant can be located to within a few degrees. Ability to train upon a 5% chemical gradient allows the cell to know where it should be going, whether to find food, antigens, or to take up its place in a larger multi-cellular structure.

Second, a cascade of polymerization steps now ensues within a few minutes. Consequently the cell develops head and tail structures, the better to make possible travel along the chemical gradient (chemotaxis). In nature, cells have also been known to plan their travel by exploiting thermal gradients (thermotaxis) and electrical gradients (galvanotaxis).

According to Andrea Gamba (andrea.gamba@polito.it) and coauthors the new results consist of being able now to demonstrate in a mechanistic way how the cell's directional sensing and response comes about through a kind of self-organized phase transition; when the chemical gradient exceeds a certain threshold level the dynamic of growth of clusters of signaling molecules on the cell surface fine-tunes to sense the slight unbalance in activated receptors and provides a fast polarization in the direction of the gradient, thus providing a compass bearing which is able to initiate the modification in the cellular structure.

The scientists argue that the physical amount of space along the body of large eukaryotic cells needed for making such an astute directional assessment might explain why bacteria (with much smaller bodies) do not have a spatial system of directional sensing. (Gamba et al., Physical Review Letters, 12 October 2007)

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