Little lamp may set quantum tech aglow. (Science News of the week).By implanting tiny atomic clusters in a commonplace electronic component, researchers have created a device that may hasten the arrival of exotic technologies that rely on quantum mechanics quantum mechanics: see quantum theory. quantum mechanics Branch of mathematical physics that deals with atomic and subatomic systems. It is concerned with phenomena that are so small-scale that they cannot be described in classical terms, and it is . The new device is a type of light-emitting diode, or LED, the class of tiny, lamps found widely in electronic items and increasingly in electric equipment ranging from on-off switches to bus tail-lights. What sets the new LED apart is that it consistently emits a single photon of light in response to a single tiny electrical pulse. That's important because investigators have been hatching schemes for exploiting quantum mechanics to boost the performance of many technologies in fields including communications, navigation, and computing (SN: 12/8/01, p. 364). Some of the schemes demand dependable sources of single photons. A few experimental sources of this sort exist, but external lasers drive them. In contrast, the new device spits out lone photons when stimulated by run-of-the-mill electric signals on microchips. That's "the only way to go for practical devices," claims Andrew J. Shields of Toshiba Research Europe Limited in Cambridge, England. He in vented the device with colleagues there and at the University of Cambridge. A related device reported by California researchers several years ago (SN: 2/13/99, p. 102) also generated solitary photons in response to voltage pulses--but only about a third of the time. Moreover, it required temperatures near absolute zero. While the new device has so far only been tested at such temperatures, it probably doesn't require that much cooling, Shields says. The novel photon emitter, which Shields says could reach the market in 3 years, can help ensure that certain quantum-cryptography systems convey messages impossible to decipher Same as decrypt. , he claims. Such emitters might also contribute to optical quantum computers (computer) quantum computer - A type of computer which uses the ability of quantum systems, such as a collection of atoms, to be in many different states at once. In theory, such superpositions allow the computer to perform many different computations simultaneously. capable of vast calculations, such as factoring numbers so huge that today's computers could never finish the task. In an upcoming issue of SCIENCE, Shields and his colleagues describe how they modified a conventional LED design, which consists of three slightly different layers of the semiconductor gallium arsenide An alloy of gallium and arsenic compound (GaAs) that is used as the base material for chips. Several times faster than silicon, it is used in high frequency applications such as cellphones, DVD players and fiber optics. . In ordinary LEDs, abundant electrons in the central layer combine with so-called holes, or absences of electrons, to release a blaze of light. In its design, the Cambridge team added to the middle layer an archipelago Archipelago (ärkĭpĕl`əgō) [Ital., from Gr.=chief sea], ancient name of the Aegean Sea, later applied to the numerous islands it contains. The word now designates any cluster of islands. of cylindrical cyl·in·dri·cal adj. Of, relating to, or having the shape of a cylinder, especially of a circular cylinder. , nanometer-scale islands, each composed of only a few thousand indium indium (ĭn`dēəm), a metallic chemical element; symbol In; at. no. 49; at. wt. 114.82; m.p. 156.6°C;; b.p. about 2,080°C;; sp. gr. 7.31 at 20°C;; valence +1, +2, or +3. and arsenic atoms. Because of quantum mechanical effects associated with those quantum islands, or dots (SN: 6/17/00, p. 392), modest voltage pulses could reliably force only one electron-hole pair into a dot at any instant. Under these conditions, the pair meets and immediately emits a photon. Atac Imamoglu of the University of California, Santa Barbara History The predecessor to UCSB, Santa Barbara State College, focused on teacher training, industrial arts, home economics, and foreign languages. Intense lobbying by an interest group in the City of Santa Barbara led by Thomas Storke and Pearl Chase persuaded the State calls the new diode "a really remarkable achievement." |
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