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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 16 2017, @03:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the let-there-be-light dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Physicists at the University of Bonn have managed to create optical hollows and more complex patterns into which the light of a Bose-Einstein condensate flows. The creation of such highly low-loss structures for light is a prerequisite for complex light circuits, such as for quantum information processing for a new generation of computers. The researchers are now presenting their results in the journal Nature Photonics.

Light particles (photons) occur as tiny, indivisible portions. Many thousands of these light portions can be merged to form a single super-photon if they are sufficiently concentrated and cooled.

The artist's rendering shows how potential wells are created for the light in the microresonator through heating with an external laser beam (green).

The individual particles merge with each other, making them indistinguishable. Researchers call this a photonic Bose-Einstein condensate. It has long been known that normal atoms form such condensates.

Prof. Martin Weitz from the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Bonn attracted attention among experts in 2010 when he produced a Bose-Einstein condensate from photons for the first time.

In his latest study, Prof. Weitz' team experimented with this kind of super-photon. In the experimental setup, a laser beam was rapidly bounced back and forth between two mirrors. In between was a pigment that cooled the laser light to such an extent that a super-photon was created from the individual light portions. "The special thing is that we have built a kind of optical well in various forms, into which the Bose-Einstein condensate was able to flow," reports Weitz.

Journal Reference: David Dung, Christian Kurtscheid, Tobias Damm, Julian Schmitt, Frank Vewinger, Martin Weitz & Jan Klärs: Variable Potentials for Thermalized Light and Coupled Condensates, Nature Photonics, DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2017.139


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  • (Score: 2) by Kromagv0 on Thursday August 17 2017, @01:56PM

    by Kromagv0 (1825) on Thursday August 17 2017, @01:56PM (#555298) Homepage

    I don't see many areas of endeavor now where we're sitting around for days or weeks waiting for computations to complete

    then you aren't looking very hard. Better faster computers will help to solve the problems you mention. As far as days or weeks for things to run, there are still problems that have been running for years and haven't been resolved. Not every one who uses a computer is using it to play candy crush in facebook or trying to get 240FPS at 3x4k resolution running Crysis42 with max detail. The amount of computing power required for a number of things that make modern society run is impressive. Computer simulation is done for just about vehicle made now in an attempt to make them safer, lighter, and more reliable, or how about the software used to manage the various power grids (go solve the traveling salesman problem with 100,000 nodes on the small side every 5 minutes). Then there is all the simulations done for protein folding, material science, and other things. In those environments you are not dealing with running some garbage java script in a browser

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