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PI Physik Instrumente - Mirorrs for Laser Comm LB LW 7/24

Lasers Cool, Control Molecules

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NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 22, 2010 — While laser cooling techniques that produce ultracold atoms have been around for decades, it has not extended to molecules because of their complex internal structure. Now physicists at Yale University are cooling molecules down to a temperature near absolute zero (-460 ºF) with the ultimate goal of using individual molecules as information bits in quantum computing. Currently, scientists use either individual atoms or “artificial atoms” as qubits, or quantum bits, in their efforts to develop quantum processors. But individual atoms don’t communicate as strongly...Read full article

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    Published: September 2010
    Glossary
    laser cooling
    Laser cooling is a technique used to reduce the temperature of a material or a collection of atoms or molecules by using laser light. It is based on the principle of selective absorption and emission of photons by atoms or molecules. In laser cooling, specially tuned laser beams are directed at the material or atoms. When these atoms absorb photons from the laser light, they gain momentum in the direction of the laser beam due to the momentum carried by the photons. However, according to...
    -460 degrees Fahrenheitabsolute zeroAmericasartificial atomsBasic ScienceBose-Einstein condensationCommunicationsConnecticutcooling moleculesDavid DeMilleEdward ShumanJohn Barrylaser coolingquantum computingquantum processorsquantum tunnelingqubitsResearch & Technologysteady stream of photonsstrontium monofluorideultracold atomYaleLasers

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