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Physics & Astronomy News
World's Smallest Semiconductor Laser
Source: Berkeley   Posted: 9/7/2009
Researchers have reached a new milestone in laser physics by creating the world's smallest semiconductor laser, capable of generating visible light in a space smaller than a single protein molecule.
Full story...
Robots Swim With the Fishes
Source: MIT   Posted: 9/7/2009
Borrowing from Mother Nature, a team of MIT researchers has built a school of swimming robo-fish that slip through the water just as gracefully as the real thing, if not quite as fast.
Full story...
Carbon Nanotube Detects Colors of the Rainbow
Source: Sandia   Posted: 9/7/2009
Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have created the first carbon nanotube device that can detect the entire visible spectrum of light.
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Acoustic Tweezers Move Tiny Objects
Source: PSU   Posted: 9/7/2009
Manipulating tiny objects like single cells often requires relatively large, unwieldy equipment, but now a system that uses sound as a tiny tweezers can be small enough to place on a chip.
Full story...
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How Lasers Work

by Richard M. J. Renneboog and ScienceIQ.com

Lasers are really useful tools for making measurements.
Lasers are really useful tools for making measurements.

Image Courtesy NOAA
Light is a fascinating thing. Or things, as the case may be. Electromagnetic energy that our eyes have developed to see, light has the same behavior and properties as all other electromagnetic radiation. But there is a dilemma that is most noticeable with light, arising from the fact that it is observed to behave at times as though it is composed of small, discrete particles, while at other times it behaves as though composed of continuous waves. This is known as the 'wave-particle duality' of light. In everyday applications this duality is unimportant, and for the most part we don't care whether we are bathed in waves or particles as long as the lights come on when we flick the switch or the sun shines when the storm clouds break apart.

But the wave-particle duality has great importance in more technical and scientific applications. In certain materials. electrons can be stimulated to switch energy levels within atoms and molecules. When those electrons go back into their original energy levels, they each give up a single 'particle' of energy called a 'photon', whose value is exactly equal to the difference in energy between the two electronic levels. When the material is made to lase in this way, the released photons are manipulated in such a way that they come out of the material as coherent waves of light. That is, the light waves all have the same wavelength, all have the same amplitude, and all the waves are in phase and traveling in parallel with each other.

Light from a non-coherent source radiates outward from that source in all directions. By contrast, a beam of laser light doesn't diverge but maintains a constant size. At least, that's the theory. In practice, laser beams do diverge in a manner that directly reflects the quality with which the laser device has been constructed. The better the laser device, the narrower, more coherent, and less divergent is the beam of laser light that it emits.

For more science facts like this one go to: ScienceIQ.com


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James Clerk Maxwell'For the sake of persons of ... different types, scientific truth should be presented in different forms, and should be regarded as equally scientific, whether it appears in the robust form and the vivid coloring of a physical illustration, or in the tenuity and paleness of a symbolic expression.'

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Book Recommendation

The Timetables of Science
by Alexander Hellemans

Fairly complete chronology of historical events in science. Discoveries are presented in a year-by-year format.  continue



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