Research Highlights

  • Breaking a molecular bond in CO-heme with a laser.
    The actors are molecules. The plot, broken molecular bonds. JILA Fellow Ralph Jimenez and a team of detector experts at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) are working together to make X-ray movies of a molecular drama. The team at NIST built a microcalorimeter X-ray spectrometer capable of performing time-resolved spectroscopy; in other words: a camera to film molecules. They use this camera to learn how molecules break their bonds 鈥撀燿o the 颅electrons rearrange, do the other atoms quake?
  • Figure illustrating using lasers to control chemical reactions at the quantum level.
    In the vast stretches between solar systems, heat does not flow and sound does not exist. Action seems to stop, but only if you don鈥檛 look long enough. Violent and chaotic actions occur in the long stretches of outer space. These chemical reactions between radicals and ions are the same reactions underlying the burn of a flame and floating the ozone above our planet. But they鈥檙e easy to miss in outer space because they鈥檙e very rare.
  • Microwave signals are translated to optical signals (red) through a microscopic quantum drum (center). Recently, JILA researchers used strategic measurements of the microwave and optical signals to significantly reduced the added noise.
    Quantum computers are set to revolutionize society. With their expansive power and speed, quantum computers could reduce today鈥檚 impossibly complex problems, like artificial intelligence and weather forecasts, to mere algorithms. But as revolutionary as the quantum computer will be, its promises will be stifled without the right connections. Peter Burns, a JILA graduate student in the Lehnert/Regal lab, likens this stifle to a world without Wi-Fi.聽
  • Researchers in the Ye Group at JILA have generated the most powerful extreme ultraviolet (XUV) frequency comb yet. Here we see xenon atoms (blue) mixed with Helium atoms (orange) blast out of a heated nozzle and crash into a pulse of coherent infrared light (red), ultimately generating a coherent XUV pulse (purple).
    With the advent of the laser, the fuzzy bands glowing from atoms transformed into narrow lines of distinct color. These spectral lines became guiding beacons visible from the quantum frontier. More than a half century later, we stand at the next frontier. The elegant physics that will decode today鈥檚 mysteries (such as dark matter, dark energy, and the stability of our fundamental constants, to name a few) is still shrouded in shadows. But a new tool promises illumination.
  • The cavity mode mediates spin-exchange interactions in which one atom emits a photon into the cavity that is then absorbed by another atom, driving anti-correlated spin flips.
    The chaos within a black hole scrambles information. Gravity tugs on time in tiny, discrete steps. A phantom-like presence pervades our universe, yet evades detection. These intangible phenomena may seem like mere conjectures of science fiction, but in reality, experimental comprehension is not far, in neither time nor space. Astronomical advances in quantum simulators and quantum sensors will likely be made within the decade, and the leading experiments for black holes, gravitons, and dark matter will be not in space, but in basements 鈥 sitting on tables, in a black room lit only by lasers.
  • A JILA collaboration between the Thompson and Holland groups has produced a new laser cooling technique, dubbed SWAP cooling, that cools atoms faster than traditional methods. The technique ramps the laser frequency (red) in a sawtooth pattern. This ramping method permits atoms (purple) to slow not only when they absorb photons (cyan), but also when they emit photons. In Norcia芒鈧劉s system, this technique quadrupled the cooling forces experienced by the atoms.
    A large fraction of JILA research relies on laser cooling of atoms, ions and molecules for applications as diverse as world-leading atomic clocks, human-controlled chemistry, quantum information, new forms of ultracold matter and the search for new details of the origins of the universe. JILAns use laser cooling every day in their research, and have mastered arcane details of the process.
  • Incident Infrared laser light (red) on a gold nanoshell (about 150 nm in diameter) coaxes electrons to stream (blue arrows) out of the surface; the electrons are then measured by a detector (cyan disc). A low-energy stream of electrons has many applications for electron imaging. 脗聽The dashed red line represents an external Electric field along the laser芒鈧劉s polarization axis. The diffuse red glow on the sides of the shell represent the near-field enhancements due to plasmonic effects.
    JILA researchers have created a laser-controlled "electron faucet", which emits a stable stream of low-energy electrons. These faucets have many applications for ultrafast switches and ultrafast electron imaging. The electron faucet starts with gold, spherical nanoshells.
  • Tens of thousands ultracold atoms (blue) sit within an optical lattice (red) like eggs in a laser carton. By shaking the optical lattice back and forth, the Anderson Group at JILA was able to split the atoms (half moved left, half moved right) and then recombine them, thus interfering their momentum. This interferometer is capable of measuring both magnitude and direction of applied forces.
    鈥淲ell, this isn鈥檛 going to work.鈥 That was recent JILA graduate Carrie Weidner鈥檚 first thought when her advisor, JILA Fellow Dana Anderson, proposed the difficult experiment: to build an interferometer unlike any before 鈥 an interferometer of shaking atoms. But the grit paid off, as this compact and robust interferometer聽outperforms all others in filtering and distinguishing signal direction. While the designs of most atom interferometers are symmetric and elegant, Weidner says the shaken-lattice experiment proposed by Anderson 鈥渋s more like broken eggs.鈥
  • The atomic clock consists of ten thousand atoms and a very impressive laser.
    We all know what a tenth of a second feels like. It鈥檚 a jiffy, a snap of the fingers, or a camera shutter click. But what does 14 billion years鈥搕he age of the universe鈥揻eel like? JILA鈥檚 atomic clock has the precision to measure the age of the universe to within a tenth of a second. That sort of precision is difficult to intuit. Yet, JILA鈥檚 atomic clock, which is the most precise clock in the world, continues to improve its precision. The latest jump in precision, of nearly 50 percent, came about from a new perspective.
  • Illustration of heated electrons in a ferromagnet.
    Magnets hold cards to your fridge, and store data in your computer. They can power speakers, and produce detailed medical images. And yet, despite millennia of use, and centuries of study, magnetism is still far from fully understood.
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