(Press-News.org) Matter wave interferometry has a long standing tradition at the University of Vienna, where the first quantum interference of large molecules has already been observed in 1999. Nowadays scientists are hunting down evidence for the quantum mechanical behavior of increasingly complex constituents of matter. This is done in experiments in which the flying of each particle seems to obtain information about distinct places in space, which are inaccessible according to classical physics.
Synchronised laser flashes for quantum interferometry
The quantum nanophysics team around Markus Arndt of the University of Vienna has now established a novel way of manipulating massive particles: the researchers use nanosecond long flashes of laser light to create gratings, three of which form a closed-path interferometer. This scheme allows creating quantum mechanical superposition states, which we do not observe in our macroscopic environment.
When precisely synchronized, the fleeting light structures form a device freed from many constraints that limited the measurement precision in earlier machines. "Interferometry in the time-domain with pulsed light gratings will become a central element of quantum experiments with nanoparticles" states Philipp Haslinger who is the first author of the paper.
Viennese prototype with powerful universality
Five students from the University of Vienna have been planning and setting up the device over the past years. The developed prototype is one of a kind: for the first time it allows to investigate the quantum wave nature not only of single molecules, but also of clusters of molecules. During an experiment these particles line up for few nanoseconds in a periodic nanopattern. This structure may serve as a "nanoruler" which enables the detection of tiny external perturbations as well as the precise measurement of small forces and fields.
### This project has been supported within the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and the Austrian Ministry of Science (BMWF). The experiments were performed within the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, VCQ, at the Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna.
Invisible tool enables new quantum experiments
Experiments on the quantum wave nature have enabled researchers to precisely measure tiny forces and displacements as well as to shed light onto the unexplored zone between the microscopic realm of quantum physics and our everyday world
2013-02-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Underage youth drinking concentrated among small number of brands
2013-02-11
A relatively small number of alcohol brands dominate underage youth alcohol consumption, according to a new report from researchers at the Boston University School of Public Health and the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth (CAMY) at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The report, published online by Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, is the first national study to identify the alcohol brands consumed by underage youth, and has important implications for alcohol research and policy.
The top 25 brands accounted for nearly half of youth alcohol ...
Researchers strain to improve electrical material and it's worth it
2013-02-11
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Like turning coal to diamond, adding pressure to an electrical material enhances its properties. Now, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign researchers have devised a method of making ferroelectric thin films with twice the strain, resulting in exceptional performance.
Led by Lane Martin, a professor of materials science and engineering, the group published its results in the journal Advanced Materials.
Ferroelectric materials, metal oxides with special polarization properties, are used in a number of advanced electronics applications. When electricity ...
EAU to release policy statement on live surgery ethics
2013-02-11
During the final day of the 28th Annual EAU Congress, which will take place on 15-19 March 2013 in Milan, the European Association of Urology will release its official policy statement on live surgery ethics. The statement and accompanying commentary will be delivered by Mr. Keith Parsons (Liverpool, UK), who chairs the EAU Guidelines Office and is a member of the working panel which was tasked with formulating the policy.
Chaired by Prof. Walter Artibani, EAU Executive Member Science, the live surgery working panel has been developing the policy since March 2012.
The ...
Bisphenol A affects sex-specific reproductive behaviors in a monogamous animal species
2013-02-11
Parents, teachers and psychologists know boys and girls behave differently. However, that difference isn't taken into account by most methods used to assess the risk to children from chemical exposure, according to Cheryl Rosenfeld, associate professor of biomedical sciences in the University of Missouri's Bond Life Sciences Center. A series of experiments by Rosenfeld studied the effects of prenatal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) on later reproductive-associated behaviors using a socially and genetically monogamous rodent, the California mouse, which may better mirror most ...
Is lead poisoning behind some juvenile crime?
2013-02-11
Lead is a common element but is found in old paints (including those once used on children's toys), soil, old piping, water, and the atmosphere from lead-containing vehicular fuels, even drinking vessels. At high dose it is lethal but also causes seemingly trivial symptoms such as headaches. However, in children lead can also lead to irreversible damage to the organs, the kidneys in particular, and the nervous system including the brain. Early detection to contaminated sources is important to prevent children coming to harm but exposure is not always apparent. The effects ...
Stem cell breakthrough could lead to new bone repair therapies on nanoscale surfaces
2013-02-11
Scientists at the University of Southampton have created a new method to generate bone cells which could lead to revolutionary bone repair therapies for people with bone fractures or those who need hip replacement surgery due to osteoporosis and osteoarthritis.
The research, carried out by Dr Emmajayne Kingham at the University of Southampton in collaboration with the University of Glasgow and published in the journal Small, cultured human embryonic stem cells on to the surface of plastic materials and assessed their ability to change.
Scientists were able to use the ...
Artificial atoms allow for magnetic resonance on individual cells
2013-02-11
Researchers from the Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO), in collaboration with the CSIC and Macquarie University in Australia, have developed a new technique, similar to the MRI but with a much higher resolution and sensitivity, which has the ability to scan individual cells. In an article published in Nature Nanotech, and highlighted by Nature, ICFO Prof. Romain Quidant explains how this was accomplished using artificial atoms, diamond nanoparticles doped with nitrogen impurity, to probe very weak magnetic fields such as those generated in some biological molecules.
The ...
1 disease, 2 mechanisms
2013-02-11
While prostate cancer is the most common cancer in elderly Western men it also, but more rarely, strikes patients aged between 35 and 50. Scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, in collaboration with several other research teams in Germany*, have discovered that such early-onset prostate cancers are triggered by a different mechanism from that which causes the disease at a later age. Their findings are published today in Cancer Cell, and might have important consequences for the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer in ...
Large study shows substance abuse rates higher in teenagers with ADHD
2013-02-11
PITTSBURGH, Feb. 11, 2013 – A new study published online in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry revealed a significantly higher prevalence of substance abuse and cigarette use by adolescents with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) histories than in those without ADHD. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of UPMC as well as six other health centers across the United States also found that, contrary to previous findings, current medications for ADHD do ...
New American Chemical Society video highlights 5 of chocolate's sweet benefits
2013-02-11
Just in time for Valentine's Day, the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society, released a new Bytesize Science video today featuring five chemistry facts that highlight why chocolate, in moderation, may be good for you. The video, produced by the ACS Office of Public Affairs, is available at www.BytesizeScience.com
The video explains how a bar of chocolate contains hundreds of compounds, many with beneficial properties. Among the video's "sweet" facts:
Chocolate may improve your mood, and not just because of its delicious flavor. Chocolate ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
White blood cell count could predict severity of COVID-19 symptoms
Moderate exercise keeps appetite at bay
Cancer drugs linked to severe chronic peripheral nerve pain for 4 in every 10 patients
Lack of essential vitamins and minerals common in people with type 2 diabetes
Calorie labels on menus could make eating disorders worse
Artificial intelligence model identifies potential risk genes for Parkinson’s disease
A new register with thousands of entangled nuclei to scale quantum networks
New avenues in quantum research: supramolecular qubit candidates detected
2024 ISS National Lab Annual Report highlights momentum in space-based R&D
New clues to the mechanism behind food tolerance and allergies
Leveraging artificial intelligence for vaccine development: A Ragon-MIT advancement in T cell epitope prediction
Moffitt Research advocates for routine brain MRI screening in asymptomatic late stage breast cancer patients
More primary care physicians are affiliated with hospitals, leading to increased patient costs
Can you really have it all? New study reveals how to succeed at work without sacrificing your free time
Western Kenyan farmers favor restoring land with native trees. Yet barriers remain
Inherited gene elevates prostate cancer risk in affected families
Rice SynthX and MD Anderson team awarded Kleberg medical grant for brain metastasis research
Microbial therapy offers new hope for vitiligo patients
Strategic corporate social responsibility can create social, economic value
Researchers identify genetic ‘fingerprint’ to predict drug resistance in bacteria
Explaining persistent hydrogen in Mars’ atmosphere
Journals publish Montana State ecologist’s studies on the effects of prey depletion on populations of large African carnivores
Journal explores dementia-related trends in high- and middle-income countries
Government Chief Scientific Adviser to launch University of Bath’s new Institute for Digital Security and Behavior
Antarctic ice sheet faces “death by a thousand cuts”
Massachusetts General Hospital, Matthew Perry Foundation announce Fellowship in Addiction Medicine
Study shows promise for treating core symptom of frontotemporal dementia
Book will guide teachers and child care providers in using the Pyramid Model
Large magma bodies found beneath dormant volcanoes, surprising scientists
Renal transporter genes and uremic toxins in aging cats with chronic kidney disease
[Press-News.org] Invisible tool enables new quantum experimentsExperiments on the quantum wave nature have enabled researchers to precisely measure tiny forces and displacements as well as to shed light onto the unexplored zone between the microscopic realm of quantum physics and our everyday world