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Physics News Update
Number 498, August 22, 2000 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein

CONTROLLABLE FEMTO-PULSES. In recent years lasers that combine high intensities with ultra-short pulse lengths (parabolic mirrors are used to turn pulses into "light bullets" only a few light cycles in extent) have been able to generate harmonic light, light with frequencies equal to multiples of that of the original light, at ever higher energy. For example, femto-second laser pulses at visible wavelengths will, if intense enough and short enough, be able to generate secondary beams of light all the way up into the x-ray range.

What happens is this: upon striking atoms in a gas, the laser electric fields are so high (a billion volts/cm) that outer electrons in the atoms are momentarily ionized but then quickly recombined with their atoms so as to radiate a photon whose energy is as much as 300 times higher than photons in the laser beam. X-ray photons made in this way should be emitted in extremely short bursts, indeed only a fraction of the laser oscillation cycle.

But until now the precise onset and end of the burst could not be manipulated because researchers have not been able to control the driving laser field, only its amplitude. Now a collaboration of scientists from the Vienna University of Technology (Ferenc Krausz, 011-43-158-801-38711) and the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics (Theodor Hansch, Garching, Germany) has succeeded in gaining control over the phase of the light pulse, and with this precise control over the electric and magnetic fields of their few-cycle light pulses, which will eventually allow one to produce reproducible, isolated attosecond (10-18 sec) x-ray pulses. (Apolonski et al., Physical Review Letters, 24 July; Select Articles; for background see Brabec and Krausz in Review of Modern Physics, April 2000 and Jones et al., Science 28 April.)

NONMOLECULAR NITROGEN has been observed by scientists at the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Because of the triple bond involved, diatomic nitrogen is one of the most strongly bonded simple molecules in nature. Atomic nitrogen has not been seen at ambient conditions and was thought to exist only under conditions of very high pressure, such as those one might find at the core of Jupiter.

The Carnegie group (Alex Goncharov, Eugene Gregoryanz, Russell Hemley, David Mao and Zhenxian Liu, 202-686-2410), begins with gaseous N2 and then squeezes until, at pressures above 150 GPa, optical hints (an overall opaqueness--see figure at Physics News Graphics --and the disappearance of radiation corresponding to the rotational and vibrational states, which one associates with molecules) indicate that the N2 molecules have dissociated into atomic N. In this state, the nitrogen appears to be semiconducting, and might yet become metallic at still higher pressures, above 275 GPa, which is being explored presently by the Carnegie researchers. (Goncharov et al., Physical Review Letters, 7 August; Select Articles.)

PYRAMID POWER. One of the problems with high resolution full-color organic light emitting diode (OLED) displays is the patterning of red-green-blue materials. Currently, this patterning is done by shadow masking technology, which limits the pixel size and resolution. This problem is eliminated in a new UCLA (Yang Yang, 310-825-4052, yy@seas.ucla.edu) design which uses rows of three- or four-sided pyramids as the pixels for producing ranks of red, green, and blue emission with high resolution (see figure at Physics News Graphics).

The unique design of pyramid pixels can also improve the efficiency of the panel by eliminating the optical waveguide effect (light being trapped in the substrate). The UCLA researchers expect to have a working pyramid pixel panel in about two years. (Yang and Chang, Applied Physics Letters, 14 August 2000; Select Articles.)