Matter News  
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to MatterNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Physicists create millimeter-sized 'Bohr atom' (7/1/2008)

Tags:
quantum mechanics, lasers, atomic model

Using laser beams and electric fields, Rice physicists coaxed a point-like, 'localized' electron to orbit far from the nucleus of a potassium atom. - Credit: Jeff Mestayer/Rice University
Using laser beams and electric fields, Rice physicists coaxed a point-like, 'localized' electron to orbit far from the nucleus of a potassium atom. - Credit: Jeff Mestayer/Rice University
Rice experiment yields closest analog yet for classic atomic model

Nearly a century after Danish physicist Niels Bohr offered his planet-like model of the hydrogen atom, a Rice University-led team of physicists has created giant, millimeter-sized atoms that resemble it more closely than any other experimental realization yet achieved.

The research is available online in Physical Review Letters.

Bohr offered the first successful theoretical model of the atom in 1913, suggesting that electrons traveled in orbits around the atom's nucleus like planets orbiting a star. Bohr's model led to a deeper understanding of both the chemical and optical properties of atoms and won him a Nobel Prize in 1922. But his notion of electrons traveling in discrete orbits was eventually displaced by quantum mechanics, which revealed that electrons don't have precise positions but are instead distributed in wave-like patterns.

"In a sufficiently large system, the quantum effects at the atomic scale can transition into the classical mechanics found in Bohr's model," said lead researcher Barry Dunning, Rice's Sam and Helen Worden Professor of Physics and Astronomy. "Using highly excited Rydberg atoms and a series of pulsed electric fields, we were able to manipulate the electron motion and create circular, planet-like states."

The team included members from Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Vienna University of Technology. Using lasers, the researchers excited potassium atoms to extremely high levels. Using a carefully tailored series of short electric pulses, the team was then able to coax the atoms into a precise configuration with one point-like, "localized" electron orbiting far from the nucleus. In fact, the atoms are true atomic giants, with diameters approaching one millimeter.

"Our measurements show that the electrons remain localized for several orbits and behave much as classical particles," Dunning said.

He said the work has potential applications in next-generation computers and in the study of classical and quantum chaos.

Co-authors include Rice graduate students Jeffery Mestayer and Brendan Wyker, Rice postdoctoral researcher Jim Lancaster, Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Carlos Reinhold and the Vienna University of Technology's Shuhei Yoshida and Joachim Burgdörfer. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, the Department of Energy and the Austrian Science Fund.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Rice University

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Scientists reveal effects of quantum 'traffic jam' in high-temperature superconductors 8/28/2008

Physicist Searches for the 'Heart of Matter' 8/25/2008

Fast quantum computer building block created 8/24/2008

Light Touch: Controlling the Behavior of Quantum Dots 8/23/2008

Creating unconventional metals 8/22/2008

Chemist travels world to study mysterious properties of neutrinos 8/21/2008

Large Hadron Collider set to unveil a new world of particle physics 8/20/2008

Toward plastic spin transistors 8/19/2008

New theory for latest high-temperature superconductors 8/14/2008

'Anti-noise' silences wind turbines 8/13/2008

Computer simulates thermal stress 8/12/2008

Researchers Make Milestone Discovery in Quantum Mechanics 8/11/2008

Research division hosts talk on ERL 8/11/2008

Researchers explain odd oxygen bonding under pressure 8/10/2008

Engineers Out to Thaw the Mysteries of Ice 8/10/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.