Nobel Prize in Physics Awarded to Trio for Capturing a Brief Look into the Rapidly Rotating Electron Sphere
October 3, 2023
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by DAVID KEYTON and MIKE CORDER
Three scientists won the Nobel Prize in physics on Tuesday for giving us the first split-second glimpse into the superfast world of spinning electrons, a field that could one day lead to better electronics or disease diagnoses.
The award went to French-Swedish physicist Anne L'Huillier, French scientist Pierre Agostini and Hungarian-born Ferenc Krausz for their work with the tiny part of each atom that races around the center and is fundamental to virtually everything: chemistry, physics, our bodies and our gadgets.
Electrons move so fast that they have been out of reach of human efforts to isolate them, but by looking at the tiniest fraction of a second possible, scientists now have a 'blurry' glimpse of them and that opens up whole new sciences, experts said.
'The electrons are very fast, and the electrons are really the workforce in everywhere,' Nobel Committee member Mats Larsson said. 'Once you can control and understand electrons, you have taken a very big step forward.'
L'Huillier, of Lund University in Sweden, is the fifth woman to receive a Nobel in physics.
'For all the women, I say if you are interested, if you have a little bit of passion for this type of challenges, so just go for it,' she told The Associated Press.
The scientists, who worked separately, used ever-quicker laser pulses to catch the atomic action that happened at such dizzying speeds—one quintillionth of a second, known as an attosecond—much like the way photographers use fast shutters to capture a hummingbird feeding.
How small is that?
'Let's take one second, which is the time of a heartbeat,' Nobel Committee chair Eva Olsson said. To get the realm of the attosecond, that would have to be divided by 1,000 six times.
Physicist Mark Pearce, a Nobel Committee member, said 'there are as many attoseconds in a second as there are seconds which have passed since the Big Bang, 13.8 billion years ago.'
But even when scientists 'see' the electron, there's only so much they can view.
'You can see whether it's on the one side of a molecule or on the other,' said L'Huillier, 65. 'It's still very blurry.'
'The electrons are much more like waves, like water waves, than particles and what we try to measure with our technique is the position of the crest of the waves,' she added.
Electrons are key because that's 'how the atoms bind together,' L'Huillier said. It's where chemical reactions occur.
'Electrons are, even if we can't see them, omnipresent in our life—our biological life and also our technical life, in our everyday life,' Krausz said at a news conference. 'In our biological life, electrons form the adhesive between atoms, with which they form molecules and these molecules are then the smallest functional building stones of every living organism.'
And if you want to understand how they work, you need to know how they move, Krausz said.
At the moment, this science is about understanding our universe, but the hope is that it will eventually have practical applications in electronics, diagnosing diseases and basic chemistry.
L'Huillier said her work shows how important it is to work on fundamental science regardless of future applications: She spent 30 years on it before possible real-world uses became more apparent.
L'Huillier was teaching basic engineering physics to about 100 undergraduates at Lund when she got the call that she had won, but her phone was on silent and she didn't pick up. She checked it during a break and called the Nobel Committee.
Then she went back to teaching.
'I was very concentrated, forgot about the Nobel Prize and tried to finish my lecture,' she told the AP. She finished the class a little early so she could speak to the news conference announcing the prize at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm.
'This is the most prestigious and I am so happy to get this prize. It's incredible,' she told the news conference. 'As you know there are not so many women who got this prize so it's very special.'
The Nobel organization posted a photo of L'Huillier on social media holding a mobile phone to her ear.
'Dedicated teacher alert!' the post on X, formerly Twitter, said. 'Not even the 2023 #NobelPrize in Physics could tear Anne L'Huillier from her students.'
And L'Huillier said because the prize was a secret at the time, she wasn't allowed to tell the students what happened, but she said they guessed.
Agostini, an emeritus professor at Ohio State University, was in Paris and could not be reached by the Nobel Committee before it announced his win to the world.
'I haven't had a telephone call from the committee. Perhaps it's not true. I don't know,' he told the AP, laughing. 'I think the committee is looking for me in Columbus.'
'There are certainly younger people who would have appreciated it far more than me,' the 82-year-old joked. 'It's good but it is a bit late for me.'
But, he added, 'I don't think I would have deserved it more earlier!'
Krausz, of the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, told reporters he was bewildered.
'I have been trying to figure out since 11 a.m. … whether I'm in reality or it's just a long dream,' the 61-year-old said.
The phone call from the Nobel committee said 'no caller ID' and Krausz usually doesn't answer those calls, but this time, he said, 'I thought I'd try it and then it became clear that I can't hang up so quickly.'
Last year, Krausz and L'Huillier won the prestigious Wolf prize in physics for their work, sharing it with University of Ottawa scientist Paul Corkum. Nobel prizes are limited to only three winners and Krausz said it was a shame it could not include Corkum.
Corkum was key to how the split-second laser flashes could be measured, which was crucial, Krausz said.
The Nobel Prizes carry a cash award of 11 million Swedish kronor ($1 million) from a bequest left by the prize's creator, Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel.
The physics prize comes a day after two scientists won the Nobel Prize in medicine for discoveries that enabled the creation of mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physics 2023 to
The Ohio State University, Columbus, U.S.
Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, Garching and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany
Lund University, Sweden
'for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter'
The three Nobel Laureates in Physics 2023 are being recognised for their experiments, which have given humanity new tools for exploring the world of electrons inside atoms and molecules. Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L'Huillier have demonstrated a way to create extremely short pulses of light that can be used to measure the rapid processes in which electrons move or change energy.
Fast-moving events flow into each other when perceived by humans, just like a film that consists of still images is perceived as continual movement. If we want to investigate really brief events, we need special technology. In the world of electrons, changes occur in a few tenths of an attosecond—an attosecond is so short that there are as many in one second as there have been seconds since the birth of the universe.
The laureates' experiments have produced pulses of light so short that they are measured in attoseconds, thus demonstrating that these pulses can be used to provide images of processes inside atoms and molecules.
In 1987, Anne L'Huillier discovered that many different overtones of light arose when she transmitted infrared laser light through a noble gas. Each overtone is a light wave with a given number of cycles for each cycle in the laser light. They are caused by the laser light interacting with atoms in the gas; it gives some electrons extra energy that is then emitted as light. Anne L'Huillier has continued to explore this phenomenon, laying the ground for subsequent breakthroughs.
In 2001, Pierre Agostini succeeded in producing and investigating a series of consecutive light pulses, in which each pulse lasted just 250 attoseconds. At the same time, Ferenc Krausz was working with another type of experiment, one that made it possible to isolate a single light pulse that lasted 650 attoseconds.
The laureates' contributions have enabled the investigation of processes that are so rapid they were previously impossible to follow.
'We can now open the door to the world of electrons. Attosecond physics gives us the opportunity to understand mechanisms that are governed by electrons. The next step will be utilising them,' says Eva Olsson, Chair of the Nobel Committee for Physics.
There are potential applications in many different areas. In electronics, for example, it is important to understand and control how electrons behave in a material. Attosecond pulses can also be used to identify different molecules, such as in medical diagnostics.
Through their experiments, this year's laureates have created flashes of light that are short enough to take snapshots of electrons' extremely rapid movements. Anne L'Huillier discovered a new effect from laser light's interaction with atoms in a gas. Pierre Agostini and Ferenc Krausz demonstrated that this effect can be used to create shorter pulses of light than were previously possible.
A tiny hummingbird can beat its wings 80 times per second. We are only able to perceive this as a whirring sound and blurred movement. For the human senses, rapid movements blur together, and extremely short events are impossible to observe. We need to use technological tricks to capture or depict these very brief instants.
High-speed photography and strobe lighting make it possible to capture detailed images of fleeting phenomena. A highly focused photograph of a hummingbird in flight requires an exposure time that is much shorter than a single wingbeat.
The faster the event, the faster the picture needs to be taken if it is to capture the instant.
The same principle applies to all the methods used to measure or depict rapid processes; any measurement must be done more quickly than the time it takes for the system being studied to undergo a noticeable change, otherwise the result is vague. This year's laureates have conducted experiments that demonstrate a method for producing pulses of light that are brief enough to capture images of processes inside atoms and molecules.
Atoms' natural time scale is incredibly short. In a molecule, atoms can move and turn in millionths of a billionth of a second, femtoseconds. These movements can be studied with the very shortest pulses that can be produced with a laser—but when entire atoms move the timescale is determined by their large and heavy nuclei, which are extremely slow compared to light and nimble electrons.
When electrons move inside atoms or molecules, they do it so quickly that changes are blurred out in a femtosecond. In the world of electrons, positions and energies change at speeds of between one and a few hundred attoseconds, where an attosecond is one billionth of a billionth of a second.
An attosecond is so short that that the number of them in one second is the same as the number of seconds that have elapsed since the universe came into existence, 13.8 billion years ago. On a more relatable scale, we can imagine a flash of light being sent from one end of a room to the opposite wall—this takes ten billion attoseconds.
A femtosecond was long regarded as the limit for the flashes of light it was possible to produce.
Improving existing technology was not enough to see processes occurring on the amazingly brief timescales of electrons; something entirely new was required. This year's laureates conducted experiments that opened up the new research field of attosecond physics.
Light consists of waves—vibrations in electrical and magnetic fields—that move through a vacuum faster than anything else. These have different wavelengths, equivalent to different colours. For example, red light has a wavelength of about 700 nanometres, one hundredth the width of a hair, and it cycles at about four hundred and thirty thousand billion times per second. We can think of the shortest possible pulse of light as the length of a single period in the light wave, the cycle where it swings up to a peak, down to a trough, and back to its starting point. In this case, the wavelengths used in ordinary laser systems are never able to get below a femtosecond, so in the 1980s this was regarded as a hard limit for the shortest possible bursts of light.
The mathematics that describes waves demonstrates that any wave form can be built if enough waves of the right sizes, wavelengths and amplitudes (distances between peaks and troughs) are used. The trick to attosecond pulses is that it is possible to make shorter pulses by combining more and shorter wavelengths.
Observing electrons' movements on an atomic scale requires short-enough pulses of light, which means combining short waves of many different wavelengths.
To add new wavelengths to light, more than just a laser is necessary; the key to accessing the briefest instant ever studied is a phenomenon that arises when laser light passes through a gas. The light interacts with its atoms and causes overtones—waves that complete a number of entire cycles for each cycle in the original wave. We can compare this to the overtones that give a sound its particular character, allowing us to hear the difference between the same note played on a guitar and a piano.
In 1987, Anne L'Huillier and her colleagues at a French laboratory were able to produce and demonstrate overtones using an infrared laser beam that was transmitted through a noble gas. The infrared light
caused more and stronger overtones than the laser with shorter wavelengths that had been used in previous experiments. In this experiment, many overtones of about the same light intensity were observed.
In a series of articles, L'Huillier continued to explore this efect during the 1990s, including at her new base, Lund University. Her results contributed to the theoretical understanding of this phenomenon, laying the foundation of the next experimental breakthrough.
When the laser light enters the gas and afects its atoms, it causes electromagnetic vibrations that distort the electric feld holding the electrons around the atomic nucleus. The electrons can then escape from the atoms. However, the light's electrical feld vibrates continuously and, when it changes direction, a loose electron may rush back to its atom's nucleus. During the electron's excursion it collected lots of extra energy from the laser light's electrical feld and, to reattach to the nucleus, it must release its excess energy as a pulse of light. These light pulses from the electrons are what create the overtones that appear in the experiments.
Light's energy is associated with its wavelength. The energy in the emitted overtones is equivalent to ultraviolet light, which has shorter wavelengths than the light visible to the human eye. Because the energy comes from the laser light's vibrations, the overtones' vibration will be elegantly proportional to the wavelength of the original laser pulse. The result of the light's interaction with many diferent atoms is diferent light waves with a set of specifc wavelengths.
Once these overtones exist, they interact with each other. The light becomes more intense when the lightwaves' peaks coincide, but becomes less intense when the peak in one cycle coincides with the trough of another. In the right circumstances, the overtones coincide so that a series of pulses of ultraviolet light occur, where each pulse is a few hundred attoseconds long. Physicists understood the theory behind this in the 1990s, but the breakthrough in actually identifying and testing the pulses occurred in 2001.
Pierre Agostini and his research group in France succeeded in producing and investigating a series of consecutive light pulses, like a train with carriages. They used a special trick, putting the 'pulse train' together with a delayed part of the original laser pulse, to see how the overtones were in phase with each other. This procedure also gave them a measurement for the duration of the pulses in the train, and they could see that each pulse lasted just 250 attoseconds.
At the same time, Ferenc Krausz and his research group in Austria were working on a technique that could select a single pulse—like a carriage being uncoupled from a train and switched to another track. The pulse they succeeded in isolating lasted 650 attoseconds and the group used it to track and study a process in which electrons were pulled away from their atoms.
These experiments demonstrated that attosecond pulses could be observed and measured, and that they could also be used in new experiments.
Now that the attosecond world has become accessible, these short bursts of light can be used to study the movements of electrons. It is now possible to produce pulses down to just a few dozen attoseconds, and this technology is developing all the time.
Attosecond pulses make it possible to measure the time it takes for an electron to be tugged away from an atom, and to examine how the time this takes depends on how tightly the electron is bound to the atom's nucleus. It is possible to reconstruct how the distribution of electrons oscillates from side to side or place to place in molecules and materials; previously their position could only be measured as an average.
Attosecond pulses can be used to test the internal processes of matter, and to identify diferent events. These pulses have been used to explore the detailed physics of atoms and molecules, and they have potential applications in areas from electronics to medicine.
For example, attosecond pulses can be used to push molecules, which emit a measurable signal. The signal from the molecules has a special structure, a type of fngerprint that reveals what molecule it is, and the possible applications of this include medical diagnostics.
More information: Advanced information: www.nobelprize.org/uploads/202 … physicsprize2023.pdf
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