Eureka!

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Prof. Gregory Falkovich. Moving up the wave

 

Archimedes reportedly shouted: “Eureka!” from his bath when he realized that a sinking object displaces a mass of water equal to its weight (as opposed to an equal volume of water). Ever since, the concept of specific gravity, known to schoolchildren and physicists alike, has been a cornerstone of our understanding of the physical world. But a new aspect of this basic law of physics, one that Archimedes never saw, has now been revealed.
 
Prof. Gregory Falkovich, Head of the Physics of Complex Systems Department, has been with the Weizmann Institute since moving to Israel from the former Soviet Union 14 years ago. He found that different types of very small objects floating on an inclined water surface move either upward or downward, depending on whether or not they “love” the water. The explanation: A water-loving, or hydrophilic, material displaces more water, by weight, than its own mass, and the resulting imbalance causes it to be carried upward. In contrast, hydrophobic - water-hating - materials displace less water than their weight, and these materials gradually move down the slope.
 
This surprising new spin on one of the most basic laws of physics was discovered when Prof. Falkovich and Dr. Sergei Lukaschuk of the University of Hull, England, were observing the movements of small beads floating on a standing wave. A standing wave does not really stand, but the water’s movements - up, down, forward and backward - cancel each other out, so that the average movement is zero. In this situation, anything floating on the wave should stay in one place. But the two scientists noted that tiny Teflon beads, which are “water-haters,” moved down the wave, while small, water-loving glass beads advanced up the wave. These findings may help explain, among other things, how oil droplets or pieces of trash form clumps in the ocean.
 
Falkovich: “Revealing a new facet of a basic law of physics is an event that doesn’t happen every day. In a sense, I feel as though I’ve had the privilege of crossing the time barrier and talking to Archimedes, one of the founding fathers of physics.”
 
Prof. Gregory Falkovich’s research is supported by the Gabriel Alhadeff Research Fund and the Edward D. and Anna Mitchell Family Foundation.
Prof. Gregory Falkovich. New spin on a basic law
Space & Physics
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Wet Scans

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The scanning electron microscope (SEM) has been a basic research tool for 50 years, and for all of those years scientists have been looking for better ways to observe biological samples under its beam. The problem is that biological samples cannot withstand the vacuum inside the SEM. Procedures used today include coating the specimens with an ultra-fine layer of gold, quick-freezing samples in special deep-freezes or treating them with drying solvents.

The scanning electron microscope (SEM) has been a basic research tool for 50 years, and for all of those years scientists have been looking for better ways to observe biological samples under its beam. The problem is that biological samples cannot withstand the vacuum inside the SEM. Procedures used today include coating the specimens with an ultra-fine layer of gold, quick-freezing samples in special deep-freezes or treating them with drying solvents.

Now Weizmann Institute researchers have found a way to view samples of biological materials in their natural, “wet” state. The secret lies in producing a very thin but tough polymer capsule to enclose the sample. Dr. Ory Zik, who developed the capsule with Prof. Elisha Moses of the Physics of Complex Systems Department, says: “We came across the capsule material while researching applications for semiconductor industry techniques in the life sciences’ SEMs.”

The capsule’s polymer is unique in that it allows the electrons with which an SEM works to pass through unobstructed, giving scientists a clear view of what lies inside, without the use of tricky, tissue-distorting procedures. Researchers hope the new method will advance the study of such biological materials as lipids, which are easily destroyed by other preparation methods.

The finding was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), USA. Zik, in cooperation with Yeda, the business arm of the Weizmann Institute, has founded a company, called QuantomiX, based on the technology.
 
Prof. Moses’ research is supported by the Clore Center for Biological Physics and the Rosa and Emilio Segre Research Award.
Technology & Applications
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Bring On the Rain

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A fast-paced rain dance inside clouds brings on rainfall, shows a new Weizmann study. The findings, published in Nature, may provide an effective tool for rain prediction.
 
The Weizmann team has revealed that turbulent whirlpools within clouds spin heavy droplets outward, much like a sling whirled around to discharge a stone by centrifugal force, a phenomenon the scientists call the “sling effect.”
Rain dance . illustration
 
Droplets hurled by a turbulent whirlpool are more likely to collide with one another than are droplets floating peacefully about. Colliding droplets form heavy, rain-producing drops. The team – Prof. Gregory Falkovich of the Physics of Complex Systems Department, graduate student Alexander Fouxon and visiting scientist Dr. Michael Stepanov – has developed a formula that makes it possible to calculate the speed with which tiny droplets in clouds cluster into the rain-producing drops. By predicting the collision rate of droplets in a turbulent cloud, the formula makes it possible to forecast when the cloud will produce rain.
 
Emergence of raindrops from the cloud occurs in two stages. First, tiny moisture droplets condense and gradually grow until they reach a diameter of about 20 micrometers (20 thousandths of a millimeter). At this size, the droplets begin crashing into one another and gathering into larger drops about a millimeter across.
 
The collisions are caused mainly by turbulent airflow, creating whirlpools and eddies inside the cloud. Since turbulent flows of different magnitudes exist in all clouds, the Weizmann Institute formula, which includes such variables as temperature, humidity and wind speed, may prove useful for improving the precision of numerous meteorological forecasts.
 
Prof. Gregory Falkovich’s research is supported by the Gabriel Alhadeff Research Fund and the Edward D. and Anna Mitchell Family Foundation.

 

 
Space & Physics
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The Physics Of Falling Leaves

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Downward spiral

The leaves fall early this autumn, in wind. - Ezra Pound, The River Merchant's Wife
 
Neuron movement, cell division, and spreading fires. What do these disparate phenomena have in common? Each has been examined in the lab of the Weizmann Institute's Prof. Elisha Moses, who studies the physical properties of natural systems. But ask Moses about his work in the Physics of Complex Systems Department and he'll downplay the immediate benefits of his research. 'I grew up with the idea that a good scientific experiment is elegant, simple, and useless,' he says. 'I usually stay away from the applied side.'
 
One project, however, has definitely taken a practical turn. The story began in 1995, when then master's student Hagai Eisenberg walked into the lab and dropped a sheet of paper. The page fluttered serenely to the floor. 'This is what I want to study,' he told Moses, and began research into how non-spherical objects behave as they fall in a liquid or gas. The problem had been a challenge in fluid mechanics for over 150 years - ever since 19th-century physicists James Maxwell and Lord Kelvin attempted in vain to offer equations that accurately predict the path of such falling objects. Eisenberg and Moses, along with visiting scientist Dr. Andrew Belmonte, now at Penn State University, built a thin glass tank - so thin that it could represent a two-dimensional system - and filled it with liquid. They then dropped a series of thin strips, metal or plastic, into the tank.
 
By making precise observations with the help of computer-enhanced imaging and flow-visualization techniques, the scientists developed a theoretical model that could accurately predict the course a strip would follow as it fell to the bottom of the tank. This two-dimensional model can be extended to the phenomenon of falling leaves or other objects in three-dimensional systems.
 
The scientists found two general types of motion: 'flutter,' in which the falling strips move back and forth from side to side, and 'tumble,' in which the strips rotate end over end. Their calculations also suggested an inherent logic. The type of motion, they discovered, is determined by a numerical constant known as the Froude number. Originally defined to describe the behavior of sailing vessels, this constant is also used to predict the maximum speed at which two- or four-legged animals can walk or trot before they must begin to run or gallop. In the case of falling strips or leaves, the Froude number defines the relationship between the size of an object and its weight: a long strip will flutter while a shorter strip tumbles.
 
Papers were published, Eisenberg moved on to Ph.D. work, and the new mathematical model found its way outside the lab. 'The behavior of falling objects is endlessly harder to predict in the real world's three dimensions,' says Moses, a lesson he learned in a Manhattan movie theater, trying to drop a quarter into a cup on the bottom of a fish tank to win free tickets. 'Even though I knew the algorithm, I probably lost four or five bucks before my wife dragged me away,' says Moses. 'But our model is pretty good - I was close every time.'
 
The team found that their model could be used to explore not only how a leaf falls to the ground but also the way a ship goes down at sea as did the Israeli submarine Dakar, which disappeared in 1969. When news of the Dakar's discovery off the coast of Crete made headlines, Moses and Eisenberg realized that their understanding of falling objects could help naval researchers who were trying to understand exactly what happened during the ship's last moments. After three decades of mystery, their mathematical model together with three-dimensional experiments carried out in collaboration with the Israeli Navy, helped to quantify the motion of the original ship, providing new insights into the Dakar tragedy.
 
'It's rewarding to see how basic research probing the fundamental principles of how nature behaves, can suddenly prove to be of unique importance,' says Moses.
 
Prof. Moses' research is supported by the Levine Institute of Applied Science and Minerva Stiftung Gesellschaft fuer die Forschung m.b.H.
Downward spiral
Space & Physics
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Genetic Loops

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Breaking apart DNA

Chop it up, unzip it, make numerous copies of it in less than an hour, or even edit it, slipping in a trait for, say, bacterial resistance or insulin production. Seems like there's no end to the stuff one can do nowadays to DNA. And future aims are no less extraordinary, like the attempt to harness DNA as wiring for microelectronics.

 

All this, however, calls for a greater understanding of the physical properties of DNA, including the way in which it 'unzips' itself when exposed to heat a process called denaturing.

 

The shape of the DNA molecule has been known since 1953 when American microbiologist James Watson, then only 25, and English physicist Francis Crick discovered its double helical structure, earning them the 1962 Noble Prize. (They shared the prize with Maurice Wilkins of Kings College, London, who had solved the problem independently at the same time.)

 

The key they discovered was chemistry. Shaped like a spiral staircase, the DNA molecule consists of two winding strands of alternating sugar and phosphate molecules. But the most interesting part of the molecule from a genetic perspective is not these strands but rather the way in which they are linked. Four nitrogen-containing bases: adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine (referred to as A, C, G, and T) wind up the helix, forming 'steps' as each base pairs up with a counterpart on the other strand. The sequence is far from random: A always pairs up with T, and C with G. Indeed, Watson and Crick realized that the strict chemical rules dictating the nature of these cross-links underlie the marvel of the DNA molecule. The specific sequence of A's, T's, C's, and G's along each DNA strand actually constitutes a code translated by cell machinery to synthesize proteins. Likewise due to these chemical rules, DNA is capable of duplicating itself with generally remarkable precision, unzipping the helix and using each strand as a template to direct the formation of a companion strand.

 

Later studies showed that the DNA molecule also 'unzips' itself (albeit with a drastically different outcome) when exposed to temperatures of about 70°C. During this separation process, loops form in certain parts of the genetic material but not in others. Why is this so? Scientists studying this physical phenomenon discovered that it stems from differences in the strength of the nucleotide bonds. The A-T bond is weaker than the C-G one. As a result, genetic sequences containing more A-T bonds will come apart faster and more easily than those rich in C-G bonds.

 

And this finding, made in the late fifties, years before advanced genetic sequencing methods were devised, stirred up a great deal of excitement. Scientists hoped to use statistical data on the location of these loops to backtrack to the DNA molecule itself, gaining information about its genetic sequence. This is where physicists studying different types of phase transitions became interested. The scientists, including the late Prof. Shneior Lifson of the Weizmann Institute, examined DNA models containing only A-T nucleotide bonds and showed that in these models, the transition from normal to 'loopy' DNA structure occurred gradually, with the loop size continuously increasing. However, experimental observations of loop formation in genetic material disproved this finding. The loops, they showed, did not increase in a slow and tidy fashion, since the DNA strands actually unzipped suddenly.

 

This frustrating contradiction in scientific knowledge persisted for more than 30 years, until graduate student Yariv Kafri of the Institute's Physics of Complex Systems Department, Prof. David Mukamel, Dean of the Physics Department, and visiting scientist Prof. Luca Peliti of the University of Napoli in Italy decided to take another look. They discovered that all the theoretical models used to describe the phenomenon contained a major flaw: they allowed adjacent DNA loops to overlap. Yet such overlapping never takes place in nature, since the DNA strands electrically repel each other.

 

This insight led the Institute scientists to study the possible ways in which DNA loops can arrange themselves in space while avoiding any overlapping between different loops and between the folded strands of the same loop. To describe the range of possible loop interactions, the researchers used mathematical knowledge gained from the study of various polymer networks. Once the avoidance of overlapping was taken into account with the help of these precise calculations, the modified theoretical models began to fit with experimental observations. The researchers predicted that when exposed to heat, transitions from a normal genetic sequence to loop formation happen suddenly just as in nature a phenomenon observed in laboratories around the world.

 

An accurate description of DNA may help in developing diverse applications, including a surprising partnership between microelectronics and natural molecules. The idea is to integrate organic molecules into microelectronics, to replace conventional components such as transistors, memory elements, and wires. This merger, say experts, may yield computer components thousands of times more compact than those presently available.

 

Prof. Mukamel holds the Harold J. and Marion F. Green Professorial Chair.

DNA strand unzipped
Space & Physics
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A Superconductor's "Electric Memory"

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Prof. Eli Zeldov. Memories of past currents

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When penetrated by magnetic fields, superconductors acquire "super memories": Electric currents flowing through them in this state are long remembered. Weizmann Institute scientists have now shown how these currents leave their lasting signature.


Unique in their capacity to conduct electricity without resistance, superconductors could one day bring a wealth of good tidings: the ability to carry electric currents across vast distances, for instance, and a wide variety of industrial and transportation technologies. A considerable number of these innovations are based on controlled exposure of superconductors to magnetic fields, and the manner in which these fields penetrate the superconductors.


Magnetic fields infiltrate some of the superconductors in the form of tiny whirlpools, each containing a weak magnetic flux at its core. Under optimal conditions, these whirlpools settle at equal distances from each other, in a fashion similar to the arrangement of molecules within a solid crystal.


However, Prof. Eli Zeldov of the Weizmann Institute's Condensed Matter Physics Department proved in the past that under certain conditions this "crystal" may undergo a "meltdown" so that the whirlpools are transformed to a disorganized state resembling the material's liquid structure. An electric current passing through a superconductor may affect the motion of the magnetic whirlpools, impairing conductivity.


In a paper recently published in Nature, Zeldov, research student Yosef Paltiel, and colleagues, including Drs. Yuri Myasoedov and Hadas Shtrikman, explain how these "whirlpools" enable the superconductor to "remember" the properties of currents that flowed through it (for example, their strength, direction, and frequency). The scientists found that the electric current leaves its mark on the magnetic "whirlpools," forming them into lasting patterns. Essentially a story of past current events these patterns provide information regarding the physical properties of currents that had previously infiltrated the superconductors.
 

The enhanced understanding of superconductors generated by this research may lead to a wide spectrum of advanced technologies, including the development of novel sensors that rely on this memory effect.


Prof. Eli Zeldov holds the David and Inez Myers Professorial Chair. His research is supported by the Philip Klutznick Endowed Scientific Research Fund, and the Robert and Giampiero Alhadeff Research Award.

 

Prof. Eli Zeldov.
Space & Physics
English

Absolute Zero

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Dr. Nir Davidson. Going for zero

Think of a Zero. Chances are your mind didn't land on laser beams, drift to Doppler effects, or free associate atoms of gas flying through the air at the greatest of ease.

That's what Dr. Nir Davidson and his colleagues from the Institute's Physics of Complex Systems Department are doing ­ -- giving lots of thought to zero. For them, absolute zero is absolutely worthy of consideration.

This is a story about turning science fiction into science function. The application of Davidson's work, cooling and trapping atoms, could be employed, for example, in building highly-accurate atomic clocks. Waves of cooled atoms could be focused, using "lenses" of laser light to create a kind of pen or etching tool, to "draw" electronic circuits much smaller than those existing today. They could be used to measure atomic constants, to confirm or deny various generalizations in quantum theory, and to research some of the basic symmetry laws of nature.

There's just one problem: Making atoms cool their heels long enough to study them. While we may neither feel nor see them, atoms of gas are constantly flying about at an incredible speed, making it extremely difficult to research their properties, let alone isolate them for application. It's difficult to conceive of, but within a completely still room, gas atoms are flying about at an average speed of 620 mph (1,000 km/h). Even at a temperature of only 3°K (-460°F, or -270°C), the atoms are still moving at about 62 mph (100 km/h).

That's where absolute zero comes in. Only at the temperature of about one-thousandth of a degree above absolute zero do the atoms "calm down" slightly and slow to a speed less than that of the pace of a walking human.

One method of cooling gas atoms is based on six "laser cannons" that "shell" groups of atoms from all directions and "catch" them almost without motion in a vacuum. Light particles, known as photons, hit the atom like a ping pong ball hitting a billiard ball. If enough ping pong balls hit amoving billiard ball in the direction contrary to its line of motion, its progress will be arrested until making it come to a full stop.

More accurately, the laser beams directed toward the atoms have a wavelength (color) slightly longer than the wavelength of the light absorbed by the atoms being cooled. Thus, the atoms at rest hardly "feel" the hits by the photons, whereas the atoms moving toward one of the beams in an attempt to leave the area they are being confined in, find themselves involved with the Doppler effect. The Doppler effect "shortens" the wavelength of the laser beam so that its photons are absorbed by the atom, which slows down its progress. This method is known as "Doppler cooling."

Like everything else in life, the Doppler cooling method also has its limitations. As a result, more advanced laser cooling methods have been developed over the years, such as the Sisyphus and the Raman cooling methods. In this way scientists have succeeded in cooling atoms to a temperature of less than one-third of a millionth of a degree above absolute zero.

To exploit these cooled atoms, the researchers must store them for as long a period of time as possible ­ hopefully, for several seconds ­ in a special trap made out of light rays. The "industry" of making light traps capable of trapping atoms istoday one of the hottest frontiers of science.

Dr. Davidson, who is working on this front, says that one should differentiate between the "illuminated" traps in which atoms of material are attracted and trapped in the illuminated area of the trap, and the dark traps, in which the atoms are repelled by the light and are trapped in the darkened part of the trap. Dr. Davidson himself first demonstrated the "dark trap" as part of his postdoctoral work at Stanford University, California, in the laboratory of Prof. Steve Chu. Chu won this year's Nobel Prize in Physics.

The "dark trap" is similar to a kind of "room" whose walls are made of laser beam light, in the center of which is darkness. The gas atoms located in the dark area try to escape from the trap, but each time they hit one of the walls of light, they're repelled.

The main advantage of the "dark trap" as opposed to the regular light traps, derives from a significant reduction in the distortions the light has on the trapped atoms (both in changing their energy levels and in the random distribution of photons from the trapping laser).

Until now, Dr. Davidson has succeeded, using his dark trap, in reducing these distortions by a factor of one thousand or more, over several seconds. His current research is directed toward further reducing the distortions, in order to extend containment time and to improve the trap's properties.

The field of science is, in a manner of speaking, about performing research until scoring a hit. In the matter of atoms of gas, cooling and trapping them, it means Dr. Davidson and team are going for zero.
 
Space & Physics
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A Record-Breaking Feat

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Prof. Mordehai Heiblum, Braun Center for Submicron Research

Gallium arsenide crystals developed at the Weizmann Institute have broken the world record for purity and speed.


The enclosure is glass-walled. Through the glass door a long tube resembling a telescope is visible. A sign on the wall identifies the apparatus as a molecular beam epitaxy machine.

This futuristic setting is in fact the "clean room" at the Weizmann Institute's Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Center for Submicron Research, where physicists are growing crystals of gallium arsenide.

The Institute team, headed by Prof. Mordehai Heiblum, and including Dr. Vladimir Umansky and doctoral student Rafael de-Picciotto, recently succeeded in growing the world's purest crystal of gallium arsenide, the semiconductor that is gradually replacing silicon, the mainstay of the microelectronics industry, in a variety of applications. For example, the main component of a cellular phone and the laser element in a compact disc player are made of gallium arsenide. This semiconductor is proving to be more efficient in carrying more and faster electronic signals, and it holds up better in outer space, where communications equipment is subjected to very low temperatures and high dosages of radiation.

Purity in semiconductors can be tested in two ways: the number of foreign, or non-gallium arsenide atoms the crystal contains, and the speed at which an electron can pass through it. The Institute team's crystal has only one foreign atom per five billion gallium arsenide atoms. This is the equivalent of a single cube of sugar in a five-story apartment house on a 300-square-meter lot.

As for speed, the new crystal beat the world record set by Bell Laboratories in 1989. Their material logged 11.7 million centimeters per second. Under the same conditions, electrons zoom through the Weizmann Institute crystal at 14.4 million centimeters per second. That's a speed of 518,400 km (324,000 miles) an hour.

What's the significance of these numbers? First, there are the commercial possibilities that producing a pure gallium arsenide crystal may bring. With fewer impurities, electrons will move faster, and this, in turn, will make a device work more quickly and more efficiently. Purity is also essential for manufacturing miniature electronic devices that behave in a predictable and uniform manner, a crucial factor for the electronics industry.

This research also has important implications for mesoscopic physics, the study of the behavior of electrons in very small devices.

This research was funded in part by the Uzi Zucker Philanthropic Fund of New York and Israel; Hermann and Dan Mayer, Paris, France; the J. Gurwin Foundation, New York; Simon Bond, New York; the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities; Austria?s Ministry of Science; the Robert Bosch Foundation, Germany; and the Israel Ministry of Defense. Research facilities: Mr. Octav Botnar, Switzerland; Mr. Lawrence Glick, Chicago, Illinois; Mr. Pierre Albert Ossona, Paris, France; Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Ramniceanu, Paris, France; Mr. and Mrs. Max Schlomiuk, D?sseldorf, Germany; the Wolfson Foundation and the Wolfson Charitable Trust, London, U.K
Space & Physics
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Solitons: The Wave of the Future

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Prof. Yaron Silberberg. Undistorted waves
 
A chance sighting by a Scotsman out riding his horse more than 150 years ago may prove the key to a revolution in the communications technology of tomorrow.

In 1834, John Scott Russell was riding along the banks of a narrow canal when he noticed a large, well-defined wave rolling along without any apparent change in shape or size. Intrigued, Russell spurred his horse on and followed the wave for more than a kilometer.

That sighting marked the first known observation of a curious physical phenomenon since termed the soliton. Solitons are ripples, waves or pulses that travel, sometimes for great distances, without any distortion in shape or size (see box.) Interest in solitons has taken off in recent years with the remarkable finding that not only waves of water but, in particular circumstances, also pulses of light can form solitons. Light or optical solitons are now widely regarded as "the wave of the future" in the dynamic field of communications.

Prof. Yaron Silberberg of the Weizmann Institute's Physics of Complex Systems Department is riding that wave. A physicist specializing in ultrafast optics, he believes light solitons could be the way to make the best use of the new fiber-optic cable networks now being laid down around the world. These cables have a much greater capacity than existing electric telephone lines, and Silberberg believes optical solitons could be the way to bring that capacity to its maximum.

But what do light pulses have to do with communication lines? When telephone calls or computer data travel along telephone lines, the sound waves or images are translated into a pattern of fluctuations in an electric current, which are converted back into sound or visual images at the receiving end. The Internet explosion of this decade has stretched existing telephone line capacities to their limits, mainly because transmitting a computer image takes up massively more "space" on a line than does converting simple sound waves.

"To make a telephone call, you need only 64,000 bits [the binary units of data -- Ed.] per second," says Silberberg, "but to transmit one screen image from your computer you may need a million bits."

Light was long ago envisaged as a replacement for electric currents because, in the right circumstances, it can travel over much larger distances at many more bits, or pulses, per second. But until recently there were two major problems in working with light: first, it is absorbed by many substances and therefore quickly lost; second, over a distance, light pulses tend to spread out and break up into their component colors, or wavelengths, leading to a distortion of the signal.

The development of fiber-optics several decades ago provided the solution to the first problem: optical fibers are narrow cables made of pure glass that do not absorb much light but keep it bouncing along until it reaches its destination. Fiber-optic cables using light pulses are now replacing traditional lines using electric currents. The fastest commercial fiber-optic system in use today attains a capacity of 2.5 billion bits per second, hundreds of times faster than the fastest electric lines. In laboratories, experimental fiber-optic systems have achieved capacities of up to a trillion bits per second.

Scientists and communications companies are now hoping that optical solitons will prove to be the solution to the second problem, that of light pulses breaking up. Scientists have found that a laser-generated light pulse of a particular wavelength, 1.5 micrometers, can create a soliton in a fiber-optic cable. Such solitons remain stable over thousands of kilometers. Moreover, they retain their integrity: send two solitons toward each other down a fiber and they will cross paths and separate again without merging -- a finding that holds great promise for increasing the capacity of any single line.
 

Solitons: The Wave of the Future

"Once created, the optical soliton is a beautiful thing," says Silberberg. He is focusing his research on understanding the basic properties of optical solitons and how they can be manipulated. In particular, he wants to learn how to manipulate one pulse of light with another. This would make it possible to build optical circuits that use optical switches, rather than the electronic switches of today, to relay data in the form of light pulses.

"It is a far-off goal, but it is my dream: to learn how to control light with light," says Silberberg.
 

Forming a Soliton:

 
When a group of people race along a standard track, they normally disperse over a distance, with the faster runners pulling ahead and the slower ones falling behind. But imagine runners placed on a mattress that gives under their weight. The bulk of the average runners in the middle would create a valley, so the faster runners at the front would find themselves on an upward slope that slows them down, while the slower runners at the back would find themselves on a downward slope that speeds them up. This would have the effect of preventing dispersion and keeping the group together as it runs along, forming a "soliton."

Like the runners on a standard track, light normally disperses over a distance because its different colors travel at different speeds. But for light pulses in certain conditions ? in particular, those around a wavelength of 1.5 micrometers -- an optical fiber acts as the equivalent of the runners' mattress, holding the light together and preventing it from dispersing. Such a pulse of light can form an optical soliton.
 
Space & Physics
English

Weizmann Scientists put Israel in Forefront of Microelectronics

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Clean room in the Submicron Research Center

Thanks to the Weizmann Institute, Israel is now in the forefront of microelectronics research, even though such research did not even exist in this country five years ago. The change was brought about by the establishment of the Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Center for Submicron Research, where scientists are exploring the physics of ultrasmall systems and providing the government and industry with know-how and technical support for the development of tomorrow's electronic devices.
 
Also thanks to the Braun Center -- headed by Prof. Mordehai Heiblum and located in the Hermann and Dan Mayer Building for Semiconductor Science -- Israel will be the venue of the 1998 International Conference on the Physics of Semiconductors.
 
Among the scientific breakthroughs achieved by Weizmann scientists at the Braun Center is the discovery -- made by Prof. Heiblum and colleagues -- that the mobility of electrons in semiconductors can be increased six-fold by manipulating the charges of impurities introduced into these materials. In another project, Dr. Udi Meirav and his team have achieved the long-standing goal of determining the distribution of electron flow under conditions known as the quantum Hall effect. In a third study, Prof. Israel Bar-Joseph and co-workers have clarified the behavior of electrons during metal-insulator transition, the phenomenon that underlies the operation of modern transistors.
 
These and other findings may provide the theoretical basis for the design of innovative ultra-tiny electronic equipment that will be faster than existing devices.

Since Braun Center scientists are conducting most of their experiments on gallium arsenide (GaAs), a superior alternative to the silicon used in advanced electronic equipment, they have gained great expertise in this material. As a result, they are engaged in collaborative projects with researchers from government and industry aimed at developing faster microwave transistors, improved optoelectronic detectors, and other devices that are based on GaAr.
 
Such collaborative projects help cover a substantial part of the running costs of the Braun Center, the only place in Israel that possesses molecular beam epitaxy and electron beam writing systems -- equipment required for growing GaAs crystals and miniaturizing them to submicron dimensions. In fact, the possibility of collaboration with the Center influenced the decision of Elta, a subsidiary of Israel Aircraft Industries, to launch a $15 million project for manufacturing GaAs devices.
Space & Physics
English
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