Tiny tubes tune in colors.For more than a century, electric devices have been transmitting and receiving radio signals via antennas that range from sky-scraping radio towers to telescoping cell phone aerials. Now, scientists have shown that far smaller antennas can snatch visible light waves from the air. To physicists, visible light differs from radio waves Radio waves Electromagnetic energy of the frequency range corresponding to that used in radio communications, usually 10,000 cycles per second to 300 billion cycles per second. in that light's wavelengths are only a millionth to a billionth as long as those of their radio cousins. Antennas must typically extend about one wavelength to do a good job of receiving an electromagnetic signal of that same wavelength. Only recently have technologists made structures tiny enough--on the scale of viruses--to have a chance at picking up light. Building on those advances, Krzysztof Kempa of Boston College Boston College, main campus at Chestnut Hill, Mass.; coeducational; Jesuit; est. and opened 1863. Actually a university, the school's Chestnut Hill campus comprises colleges of arts and sciences and business administration, the graduate school, and schools of nursing and his colleagues have created arrays of standing carbon nanotubes (SN: 9/18/04, p. 180), each about a thousandth the thickness of a human hair and roughly the length of a wavelength of light. In the Sept. 27 Applied Physics Letters Applied Physics Letters is a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the American Institute of Physics devoted to the publication of new experimental and theoretical papers about applications of physics to science, engineering, and modern technology. , the team reports two signs that such tubes respond to light in the same way as a cell phone's antenna responds to an incoming call. First, the impinging light's oscillating os·cil·late intr.v. os·cil·lat·ed, os·cil·lat·ing, os·cil·lates 1. To swing back and forth with a steady, uninterrupted rhythm. 2. electric field excites the tubes only when the oscillations oscillations See Cortical oscillations. are aligned with the tubes. Second, each color energizes only tubes close in length to that color's wavelength. Because "antennas are theoretically the best converters of radiated energy into electricity," a new type of highly efficient solar cell maybe in the offing coming; arriving in the foreseeable future. visible but not nearby. See also: Offing Offing , says Kempa. Other possibilities, he says, are future optical devices that will receive data in businesses and homes at much higher rates than are affordable today. |
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