Number 310, March 6, 1997 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein
1ST-GRADE MATH---PRIMITIVE QUANTUM COMPUTERS
have arrived earlier than expected, and they have already performed
simple calculations, researchers announced at last month's
AAAS
meeting in Seattle. Whereas ordinary computers essentially
manipulate on-off switches each representing a 0 or a 1, quantum
computers are potentially more powerful because they employ
quantum systems which can exist in two states simultaneously to
represent both 0 and 1 at the same time. Independently, an
MIT-Los Alamos team and a Harvard-MIT group have proposed an
unexpected way to make a quantum computer: use a cup of liquid.
When exposed to a magnetic field, one in a million of the atoms
will settle into a "spin" state in which the atoms' internal magnets
are aligned with the field. One can then cause each of these spins
to act as a "quantum bit" (or "qubit") by firing electromagnetic
pulses which cause each spin to enter two states simultaneously.
Subsequent pulses can then perform logic operations, by exploiting
the fact that the spin state of a particular kind of atom can affect the
spin state of a different atom in the same molecule or in a
neighboring one. By manipulating the spins in three distinct types
of quantum systems that exist within the liquid, the MIT-Los
Alamos group has constructed a three-qubit system that has
successfully executed the mathematical calculation 1+1=2. With
their current approach, the researchers believe 10-qubit systems
may be possible. (Science,
17 January; The Economist, February
22, 1997; also see
MIT Media Lab site on quantum computation)
DECELERATION CAN BE AS IMPORTANT AS
ACCELERATION when doing atom-trap experiments. A team of
physicists at the Max Planck Institute (Heidelberg; contact Rudolf
Grimm, r.grimm@mpi-hd.mpg.de) and the Ecole Normale
Superieure (Paris) have succeeded in slowing cesium atoms, just out
of the oven, from a velocity of 160 m/sec down to a speed (8
m/sec) where they can easily be captured in a trap, all in a space of
only 10 cm, rather than the customary 1 m. Just as important as the
slowdown are the tight beam focus and the narrow range of final
velocities among atoms in the beam. This is potentially important
for future atom lithography applications and for Bose-Einstein
condensate studies. The deceleration is accomplished through the
palpable force of laser light. Besides producing an efficient
collimation of cold atom beams, this laser scheme can be used to
"clean" beams by removing unwanted isotopes and might help to
manipulate exotic atoms which cannot be controlled by other means.
(J. Soding et al.,
Physical Review Letters, 24 February 1997.)
THE NAMES OF ELEMENTS 104-109 have finally been accepted
by nuclear scientists and certified by the
International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry. The delay over the names was caused
partly by rival claims to priority; the pertinent experiments
rendered mere handfuls of atoms. Physics and chemistry students
worldwide will now have to memorize the following additions to the
Periodic Table: Rutherfordium (abbreviated Rf, element 104),
Dubnium (Db, 105), Seaborgium (Sg, 106), Bohrium (Bh, 107),
Hassium (Hs, 108), and Meitnerium (Mt, 109). (The
New York
Times, 4 March 1997.)
COMET HALE-BOPP, inherently brighter than last year's Comet
Hyakutake, should put on a brilliant display from March on into
May. During the best viewing, late March to early April, the
comet is in the evening sky to the northwest. (Sky
& Telescope,
April 1997.)
|