____________________________________________________________________ Before a larger group can see the virtue of an idea, a smaller group must first understand it. "Stranger Suns" George Zebrowski The Armadillo Group ,::////;::-. James Choate Austin, Tx /:'///// ``::>/|/ ravage@ssz.com www.ssz.com .', |||| `/( e\ 512-451-7087 -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'- -------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 4 Jan 2001 13:25:48 -0500 (EST) From: AIP listserver <physnews@aip.org> To: physnews-mailing@aip.org Subject: update.519 PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News Number 519 January 4, 2001 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein PHYSICS NEWS STORIES OF THE YEAR. Our top three stories represent one definite sighting and two near misses: the discovery of the tau neutrino (Update 495) and the report of statistically-poor but fascinating evidence for quark-gluon plasma (Update 470) and the Higgs boson (502). Other top physics events for the year 2000 include (in roughly chronological order through the months) the resolution of the astrophysical x-ray background into discrete sources (467); the ability to guide atoms around "atom chips" (469, 486); all-optical NMR (472); quantum entanglement of 4 ions in a trap (475); the fabrication of a "left- handed" composite material, one possessing both a negative electrical permittivity and a negative magnetic permeability (476); the best map yet of the cosmic microwave background, showing that the curvature of the universe is zero (479, 481); the observation of quantum heat, particles of thermal energy moving down wires (481); the best measurement, by a factor of 10, of the gravitational constant G (482), with a corresponding adjustment in the mass of the Earth; the first-time measurement of gravity at the micron distance scale as part of the search for extra dimensions (483); the quantum superposition of superfluid currents flowing in both directions through a SQUID (492); a record number of daughter particles made in heavy-ion collisions at RHIC (505); numerous advances in quantum cryptography (480); light slowed to 1 mph (472); advances in delivering drugs and genes with ultrasound-activated bubbles (487); and the discovery that entangled photons can defeat the diffraction limit (503). NONCLASSICAL LIGHT. A feature of quantum theory is that objects should have both particle and wave properties. Thus, things usually encountered as particles such as electrons or atoms show their quantum, or nonclassical, nature in the form of wavelike effects. Conversely, light, which can usually be described by a wave equation, shows its nonclassical side by acting like a particle. In most optics experiments, even those involving lasers, the light produces only classical effects which can be described using 19th century electromagnetism. For example, a grocery scanner diode laser emits about 10^15 photons per second. When such a stream encounters a half-silvered mirror, half of the light will be reflected, and half transmitted. With so many photons, the individual particle nature is hidden when the photons are detected at photodiodes sitting behind each exit port of the beamsplitter. If the original laser beam is replaced with a source of single photons, then the story is different: a lone photon might well have an equal chance of going towards either detector, but it will ultimately register in only one, a sure sign of quantum behavior. One can probe these issues more deeply by using entangled photon pairs. Kevin Resch, Jeff Lundeen, and Aephraim Steinberg at the University of Toronto send ultraviolet (UV) light into a special crystal in which a single UV photon can produce two red photons in a process called down-conversion. One of the red photons is vertically polarized and the other is horizontally polarized, and therefore the photons can be time- delayed relative to one another by varying the thickness of birefringent material (which can swivel a light wave's orientation) traversed by the photon. By adjusting the delay between the photons, the researchers were able to change the number of photon pairs emerging from an interferometer without changing the intensity, or brightness, of the beam. Owing to the intrinsic nonlinear response of the detectors this quantum interference effect then became apparent in the counting rate at a single detector (an effect never before observed) and not just in the coincidence rate between a pair of photodetectors. The researchers believe that the ability to observe such nonlinear responses in photodetection at the single photon level may be useful to the study of decoherence in photodetection and for providing an experimental basis for developing a more accurate theoretical description for photodetection. (Physical Review A, 1 February 2001; Kevin Resch contact: 416-946-3162, resch@physics.utoronto.ca.)