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If you were asked to draw an accurate representation
of a pulse of laser light that lasts 4.5/1,000,000,000,000,000 of
a second (4.5 femtoseconds), how would you do it? Where would you
start?
Cant even imagine such a timeframe? Considering its
the shortest laser light pulse that has ever been produced, who
could blame you. Maybe it will help to think of it this way: the
duration of this light pulse is to a minute as a minute is
to the age of the universe. Very short.
Still having trouble? Then consider the illustration below, which
represents a 4.5-femtosecond pulse. It shows two aspects of light.
In the first, that light is a wave (the red lines). In the second,
a short pulse is the total of waves of different wavelengths (the
blue line). The ticks on the horizontal axis are 3 femtoseconds
apart.

Now that youve indulged us with your powers of imagination,
well get to the point. What can we do with something so infinitesimally
short? The possibilities are virtually unlimited and carry with
them great potential for all aspects of our lives. In fact, once
we learn how to harness that light pulses power, we can use
it for applications as diverse as increasing the speed and capacity
of our telecommunications-delivery systems, and introducing new
tools for non-invasive diagnostics and bloodless surgery.
Small but mightythe power of concentration
Despite popular belief and images in the media of the extraordinary
power of lasers, scientists are quite aware that individual laser
pulses have very little energy. If you think of the impact of a
fly landing on a human arm, youll have a fairly accurate comparison
of the kind of energy that comes from a single laser.
However, when the same light pulse is compressed to a femtoseconds
duration, the pulse ends up containing hundreds of gigawatts and
takes on new power. The result? It can easily exceed the total power
produced in all of Canada during that same femtosecond. But we can
go even further. If we focus those hundreds of gigawatts of power
on a target only 1/100 the diameter of a human hair, the energy
coming from the light pulse is astronomically intensified. Figuratively
speaking, youd end up with an inferno. At least thats
what should happen. At this point, the science is so new that no
one in the world has much experience with such high concentrations
of power. And as scientists continue to study it, they keep making
new discoveries.
At low intensitiesholding molecules
in pockets of light
Before we continue on our investigation of the energy in light pulses,
well need some background on the nature and composition of
molecules.
A molecule is made up of many electrons whizzing around a set of
heavy ions. The electrons are held in place by the attraction between
their negative charge and the positive charge of their heavy ions.
The electrons, in turn, help glue the ions together, making the
molecule. Its a tight and amicable relationship. But if you
focus a laser light directly on a molecule, it pushes
both the positive ions and the negative electrons, trying to move
them in opposite directions. Since the electrons are not as massive
as the ions, they give in first.
What happens next can best be visualized by thinking of the molecule
as a ball. The moving electrons allow the laser beam to grasp the
ball much the same way that you would grasp a ball in your hand.
(Interestingly, if the light is strong enough it will distort the
molecule, just as you can deform a soft NERF® ball by squeezing
it.) Once you grasp the ball in your hand, the ball must follow
every move your hand makes. Similarly, if we grasp a molecule in
a light pulse, we can move the light pulse, and the molecule must
follow. Imagine how, during a baseball game, a pitcher twists his
fingers as he throws a ballto put a spin on it. If we do the
same to a molecule by twisting the light pulse, the
molecule will also spin.
Although this is a new area of research, at the National Research
Council (NRC) we have already shown that laser beams can move molecules,
and that we can focus molecules just as we focus light with a lens.
We have also shown that you can spin a moleculesometimes so
fast that the molecule breaks into pieces.
At intermediate intensitieseven shorter
pulses
Weve just expended a considerable amount of energy demonstrating
that femtoseconds are very short. No arguments there. But now its
time to consider something thats even shorter: attoseconds.
In fact, attoseconds are 1,000 times shorter than femtoseconds.
Scientists will soon be able to make 100-attosecond light pulses.
The technology to do this requires light pulses of higher intensity
than those needed to hold a molecule. They should be just high enough
so that the force of the laser on the electrons overcomes the force
holding an electron in an atom or molecule.
As we pull a single electron free, it is buffeted by the light wave.
To get a good picture of what happens next, let us consider a lifeboat
launched from a ship in stormy seas. As it swings free of the ship,
it rocks in the waves. Unless the ships crew is very careful,
the lifeboat might collide with the parent ship. In this way, the
electron can also collide with the ion that it just left. In the
ensuing violent collision, the electron can emit lightleaving
the analogue of the lifeboat shattered.
We are able to control the electron-ion collision so well that it
can be restricted to only a single 100-attosecond time interval.
This means that scientists are close to achieving the goal of producing
100-attosecond light pulses. And when thats possible, a whole
new world of possibilities will open up.
At higher intensities: photographing chemical
reactions
Every high school science student knows that, in a chemical reaction,
the atoms in a molecule rearrange themselves. Although were
sure it happens, its not visible to the naked eye. Imagine
the possibilities, however, if we could actually photograph the
chemical reaction. How could it be done? In labs all around the
world, the investigation has been underway for quite some time.
Scientists have been working on the challenge of observing chemical
reactions in real time for some 15 years now, and have made considerable
progress. In fact, the 1999 Nobel Prize in chemistry, which went
to Dr. Ahmed H. Zewail, recognized his significant contribution
to this area of investigation.
But obstacles remain and we still have a long way to go. For example,
we cant use the visible light that normal photography uses
because the wavelength of ordinary light is too large. We have considered
using X-rays, but X-rays are difficult to manipulate and were
just now learning how to make short bursts of X-rays.
At the National Research Council, we believe that we can come close
to producing an actual photograph, at least for small molecules.
It would require light of higher intensity than we needed to create
attosecond pulses. And while these pulses dont have to be
of the inferno variety, they have to be powerful enough
to pull a large number of the molecules electrons free from
their ions, thereby breaking the bond that holds the atoms of the
molecule together.
The opportunity to accomplish this lies with the ions, whose charges
naturally repel each other. When attosecond pulses are used to remove
a large number of the electrons, the remaining ions are all positively
charged. They explode apart like a firecracker. Therefore, if we
want to see how the molecule was shaped just before
we triggered the explosion, we would need only to catch all of the
fragments and determine where they came from, and then reassemble
them pictorially, using computer graphics. Need a better mental
picture of how this would work? Imagine a film that depicts a car
filled with explosives. When the explosives are detonated, the roof
of the car flies up, the doors to each side, the headlights forward.
If we caught each piece, we could deduce the basic shape of the
car just before it exploded.
Approaching the highest intensity: relativity
For scientists, one of the most exciting prospects of all is the
possibility of bringing relativity right into the laboratory where
we can study and exploit it whenever we wish. The lasers for doing
this are small enough to fit on a dining room table and they are
sure to get smaller.
Therefore, if scientists are creative enough to find important applications,
we may someday benefit from appliances in our homes, or devices
in our hospitals, that rely on relativity. Even scientists are amazed
that we can now imagine exploiting in daily life such seemingly
obscure and remote concepts as Albert Einsteins famous equation
E=mc2, which established exciting
new theories about light and gravity.
Let me explain how relativity is being tamed. Einstein stated that
it is impossible for any object to exceed the speed of light because,
as the object (no matter how large or small) approaches that speed,
it is held back by an ever-increasing mass. We know that light pushes
on electrons, and intense light pushes on them very hard. At only
about 1/10,000 of the maximum light intensity that we can technically
reach, any electron caught in the light is accelerated first one
way, then the other way, as the light wave oscillates. During each
1/2 period of the light wave, the electron is accelerated from rest
to very close to the velocity of light, then returns to rest. The
process takes only about 1.5 femtoseconds.
It is too early to know if we will find something important enough
to warrant bringing relativity into our homes. Since I cannot provide
a practical application of relativity yet, let me instead introduce
you to an early spin-off of this area of science.
Applicationwriting waveguides
Over the past two decades, we have learned that laser technology
continues to get better and betterwhether its applied
to laser pointers, your CD player, or the supermarket checkout machine.
This is equally true for femtosecond lasers. They will eventually
become pocket-size devices, which means they will likely be used
in many applications.
One practical application of this that we are studying at the NRC
is emerging from an area of applied research that involves photonic
integration. How does it work? Imagine that we focus light into
a transparent materiala window glass, for example. Away from
the point of focus, the laser light enters the glass just like sunlight.
Only near the focus (inside the glass) does the light become so
intense that it pulls electrons free from the material, in the same
way it pulls them free of a molecule. There is not, however, very
much energy in the pulse and there are a large number of molecules
in the solid, so very soon the pulse runs out of steam. Although
it begins violently, the pulse soon wimps out. And because
it wimps out, it does not damage the glass. Instead, the pulse gently
modifies the glass.
We soon discover that, if we move the laser beam after each shot,
we can actually draw inside glass (almost like a pen draws on a
piece of paper). If we move continuously, we draw a continuous line.
We can guide light along this line, just as we guide electricity
along a copper wire, or light along a fibre-optic waveguide. Just
as in the 1960s scientists developed the technology that allowed
many electronic devices to be integrated onto the surface of a single
silicon chip, todays new technology for writing inside transparent
materials will be one of the important tools of photonic integration.
For the first time, we would be able to write optical circuits in
3-D.
My view of the future
It is often said that the heyday of science was in the early part
of the 20th Century when so many fundamental theories were discovered.
These theories described the mechanics of natures building
blocks: atoms, molecules, solids. However, although theory at that
time flourished, actual experiment had a long way to
go.
In my opinion, experiment is now catching up. Scanning tunneling
microscopes have made individual atoms visible to us. Femtosecond
lasers have given us a tool to harness forces that are as strong
as those that hold matter together. Not only that, we can now control
these forces with incredible precision. These tools give us tweezers
of light to reach into the microworld, where we will be able
to manipulate atoms and molecules at will and clear a path that
will lead us to incredible breakthroughs in numerous areas. With
such significant breakthroughs within our grasp, I truly believe
that the present time is just as exciting and important to experiment
as the 1920s were to theory.
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