For the first time, scientists have used mechanical motion to make atoms in a gas "spin." The technique eventually might be used in high-performance magnetic sensors, to enable power-efficient chip-scale atomic devices such as clocks, or serve as components for manipulating bits of information in quantum computers.Microcantilever experiment demonstrating magnetic coupling of mechanical motion to atomic spin. The approximately 200-µm cantilever (circled) has a tiny magnetic particle on the free end. Rubidium atoms are confined in the cubic vapor cell to the left. (Photo: Ying-Ju Wang, NIST) As described by scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the Dec. 1 issue of Physical Review Letters, a vibrating microscale cantilever, a tiny plank anchored at one end like a diving board, was used to drive magnetic oscillations in rubidium atoms. The scientists attached a tiny magnetic particle -- about 10 by 50 by 100 µm in size -- to the cantilever tip and applied electrical signals at the cantilever's "resonant" frequency to make the tip of the cantilever, and hence the magnetic particle, vibrate up and down. The vibrating particle in turn generated an oscillating magnetic field that impinged on atoms confined inside a 1-sq-mm container nearby. The electrons in the atoms, acting like tiny bar magnets with north and south poles, responded by rotating about a static magnetic field applied to the experimental setup, causing the atoms to rotate like spinning tops that are wobbling slightly. The scientists detected the rotation by monitoring patterns in the amount of infrared laser light absorbed by the spinning atoms as their orientation fluctuated with the magnetic gyrations. Atoms absorb polarized light depending on their orientation with respect to the light beam. Microcantilevers are a focus of intensive research in part because they can be operated with low power, such as from a battery, and yet are sensitive enough to detect very slight changes in magnetic fields with high spatial resolution. The NIST team noted that coupling between cantilever motion and atomic spins is easy to detect, and that the atoms maintain consistent rotation patterns for a sufficiently long time, on the order of milliseconds, to be useful in precision applications. For instance, by comparing the oscillation frequency of the cantilever to the natural rotation behavior of the atoms (determined by measuring the extent of the wobble), the local magnetic field can be determined with high precision. Or, arrays of magnetic cantilevers might be constructed, with each cantilever coupled vibrationally to the others and coupled magnetically to a unique collection of atoms. Such a device could be used to store or manipulate binary data in a quantum computer. In theory, the coupling process also could work backwards, so that atomic spins could be detected by monitoring the vibrational motion of the cantilevers. The research was supported in part by DARPA. For more information, visit: www.nist.gov