Friday, February 13, 2009

Bouncing Atoms Measure Gravity

This is one of those amazingly clever experiment. Physicists in Virginia have managed to trap atoms with magnetic field and then cause them to bounce when they collide with an upward laser light.

Initially held up by a magnetic field, the atoms fall when the field is switched off. As they drop down, most of the atoms collide with photons emitted by a laser diode placed directly under the trap, which emits pulses of light in an upwards direction about once every 2 ms. When the atoms collide, they each receive a precise amount of momentum, which knocks them back up. These atoms then fall down again, only to collide with the next laser pulse.


They can make very accurate measurement of the gravitational acceleration, and supposedly, plan to increase its accuracy.

Zz.

1 comment:

Kent Leung said...

For those interested, similar tests have already been done with single neutrons at the ILL.

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v415/n6869/full/415297a.html
or
http://www.ill.eu/fileadmin/users_files/media/groups/NPP/doc/highlights/quantum.pdf