SETI public: Fw: JPL Researchers Unveil Superconductor-based Light Detector

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Mon Oct 27 2003 - 09:20:29 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Friday, October 24, 2003 3:03 AM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: JPL Researchers Unveil Superconductor-based Light Detector

    MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
                                        
    JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
    CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
    PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/

    Natalie Godwin (818) 354-0850
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

    Robert Tindol (626) 395-3631
    California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif.

    NEWS RELEASE: 2003-141 October 23, 2003

    JPL Researchers Unveil Superconductor-based Light Detector

    A new and improved way to measure light has been unveiled by
    physicists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the California
    Institute of Technology, both in Pasadena, Calif. The technology
    exploits the strange but predictable characteristics of
    superconductivity, and has a number of properties that should lead to
    uses in a variety of fields, from medicine to astrophysics.

    Reporting in the October 23 issue of Nature, JPL researchers Drs.
    Peter Day and Henry LeDuc, along with Dr. Jonas Zmuidzinas, a Caltech
    physics professor, outline the specifications of their superconducting
    detector. The device is cleverly designed to sidestep certain
    limitations imposed by nature to allow for very subtle and precise
    measurements of electromagnetic radiation, which includes visible
    light, radio signals,
    X-rays and gamma rays, as well as infrared and ultraviolet
    frequencies.

    At the heart of the detector is a strip of material that is cooled to
    such a low temperature that electrical current flows unimpeded -- in
    other words, a superconductor. Scientists have known for some time
    that superconductors function as they do because of electrons in the
    material being linked together as "Cooper pairs" with a binding energy
    just right to allow current to flow with no resistance. If the
    material is heated above a certain temperature, the Cooper pairs are
    torn apart by thermal fluctuations, and the result is electrical
    resistance.

    The researchers designed their device to register the slight changes
    that occur when an incoming photon -- the basic unit of
    electromagnetic radiation -- interacts with the material and affects
    the Cooper pairs. The device can be made sensitive enough to detect
    individual photons, as well as their wavelengths or color.

    However, a steady current run through the superconducting material is
    not useful for measuring light, so the researchers have also figured
    out a way to measure the slight changes in the superconductor's
    properties caused by the breaking of Cooper pairs. By applying a
    high-frequency microwave field of about 10 gigahertz, a slight lag in
    the response due to the Cooper pairs can be measured.

    In fact, the individual frequencies of the photons can be measured
    very accurately with this method, which should provide a significant
    benefit to astrophysicists, as well as researchers in a number of
    other fields, Zmuidzinas said.

    "In astrophysics, this will give you lots more information from every
    photon you detect," he explained. "There are single-pixel detectors
    in existence that have similar sensitivity, but our new detector
    allows for much bigger arrays, potentially with thousands of pixels."

    Such detectors could provide a very accurate means of measuring the
    fine details of the cosmic microwave background radiation, which is
    the relic of the intense light that filled the early universe. It's
    detectable today as an almost uniform glow of microwave radiation
    coming from all directions.

    Measurements of the radiation are of tremendous interest in cosmology
    today because of extremely faint variations in the intensity of the
    radiation that form an intricate pattern over the entire sky. These
    patterns provide a unique image of the universe as it existed just 300
    thousand years after the Big Bang, long before the first galaxies or
    stars formed. The intensity variations are so faint, however, that it
    has required decades of effort to develop detectors capable of mapping
    them.

    It was not until 1992 that the first hints of the patterns imprinted
    in the radiation by structure in the early universe were detected by
    the Cosmic Background Explorer satellite. In 2000, using new detectors
    developed at JPL and Caltech, the Boomerang experiment, led by Caltech
    physicist Dr. Andrew Lange, produced the first resolved images of
    these patterns. Other experiments, most notably the Cosmic Background
    Imager of Caltech astronomer Dr. Tony Readhead, and the Wilkinson
    Microwave Anisotropy Probe, led by Dr. Charles L. Bennett of NASA's
    Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt Md, have confirmed and extended
    the results to even higher resolution. The images obtained by these
    experiments have largely convinced the cosmology research community
    that the universe is geometrically flat and that the theory of rapid
    inflation proposed by Dr. Alan Guth, a physicist at the Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass., is a reality.

    Ben Mazin and Anastasios Vayonakis, Caltech graduate students working
    in Zmuidzinas's lab, also contributed to the paper. The research was
    funded by NASA's Aerospace Technology Enterprise, the JPL Director's
    Research and Development Fund, and Caltech's President's Fund.

          -end-


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