Science, culture, complexity

Tag: laser

  • A laser to make light of many shapes

    Lasers can produce a slender beam of light of just one wavelength. For this simple feature, they are everywhere in modern technology, from the internet to medical devices and even in entertainment as holograms. However, traditional lasers have some limitations. For example, to use them in particular applications, engineers currently use ensembles of lenses and mirrors to ‘shape’ the light.

    Scientists from Australia and China have reported in Nature a way to produce laser light in specific shapes. A laser is a device that produces intense, focused beams of light. The new device, called a metalaser, produces such light using a metasurface: ultra-thin layers made up of artificial atoms that control light in specific ways.

    By designing the metasurface carefully, the scientists could control the colour and brightness of the laser as well as the precise shape and direction of the light waves it emitted. This meant the laser could create images, focus to a point or line, and even produce special patterns like spirals or holograms, all without the need for bulky optical elements.

    The scientists created a flat surface covered with a grid of microscopic discs made of silicon nitride. Each disc had a small hole that could be rotated to a specific angle. By changing the angle of each hole, the scientists could control the phase (the position in the light wave’s cycle) of the light coming from each disc. This phase is called the geometric phase. When the laser emitted light, these various geometric phases combined to closely shape the overall wavefront.

    By the way, the geometric phase is called the Pancharatnam-Berry phase after S. Pancharatnam and Michael Berry. Pancharatnam independently discovered the geometric phase in 1956. His promising career in physics was cut disappointingly short when he died in 1969 aged only 35. Berry discovered the geometric phase in 1986. Eight years later, the British physicist George Series wrote in a special issue of Current Science dedicated to Pancharatnam that “his work received renewed attention and acclaim only after the recognition, in the eighties, that he had derived and used the concept of geometric phases in his studies of the interference of polarised light.” More here.

    Back to the study: the laser light was trapped on the metasurface by an effect called a bound state in the continuum (BIC). A BIC is a special kind of wave that, despite having enough energy to escape and spread out, remains perfectly trapped and doesn’t leak away. It’s akin to a wave that should be able to travel freely but due to conditions like interference is confined and doesn’t interact with the surrounding ‘free’ waves. BICs are also unique because they persist rather than dissipate away.

    The BIC helped keep the light focused and intense. When it was time for the metalaser to emit a laser beam, the team introduced a controlled perturbation in the structure, such as by adjusting the shape, position or orientation of the meta-atoms on the metasurface. This disturbance allowed the light to ‘leak’ into the outside world through a well-defined channel. At this point, the disks acted like small antennas, emitting light whose direction and phase depended on the holes’ rotation.

    By carefully setting the phase at each point, the scientists could make the laser beam form any pattern they wanted even as it travelled away from the surface.

    The scientists started with a glass base and added a patina of silicon nitride. Using electron-beam lithography — which is a technique like 3D printing but with electrons — they created the tiny discs and holes with precise angles. The discs were finally covered with a thin layer of dye-doped plastic that helped to amplify the emitted light. The discs were called ‘meta-atoms’ because they were essentially artificial atoms.

    First, the team pumped the metalaser to make it emit light. Pumping is an essential step in any laser. In a regular laser, a population of atoms called the gain medium is ‘pumped’ with energy to push the atoms’ electrons into an excited state. Then, when some electrons spontaneously lose the energy they absorbed earlier and become de-excited, they release photons. The presence of these photons stimulates other excited atoms to emit identical photons as they return to a lower energy state. as well. As this process repeats itself, the gain medium releases more and more photons of a fixed energy that reflect back and forth in the cavity before entering the outside world as laser light.

    The metalaser had one extra step: a separate laser pumped the metalaser’s gain medium. According to the paper, using a laser as the pump source was more efficient because its light was tuned to exactly match the energy levels required to excite the gain medium.

    By rotating the holes in the discs, the scientists could create metalasers of almost any shape: focused spots, lines, spirals, even complex images like holograms. Traditional lasers often create speckle noise — the reason holograms have that grainy look — but the metalasers could produce holograms with almost none of this noise. The results were much clearer and sharper images.

    Credit: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09275-6

    The team also reported that the metalaser achieved a quality factor — a measure of how well it stores energy — high enough to mean the laser was producing a pure colour. The design could also be changed to produce different types of beams, including those with special polarisation (the direction in which the light waves vibrated) or orbital angular momenta (twisting light). In fact, the team wrote in its paper that their approach could be used to make programmable lasers that switch between patterns on demand.

    The metalaser setup in the new study is microscopic, per the study, and can be integrated into small devices. Since the laser itself shapes the beam, there is no need for additional mirrors, lenses or filters.

  • Scientists make video of molecule rotating

    A research group in Germany has captured images of what a rotating molecule looks like. This is a significant feat because it is very difficult to observe individual atoms and molecules, which are very small as well as very fragile. Scientists often have to employ ingenious techniques that can probe their small scale but without destroying them in the act of doing so.

    The researchers studied carbonyl sulphide (OCS) molecules, which has a cylindrical shape. To perform their feat, they went through three steps. First, the researchers precisely calibrated two laser pulses and fired them repeatedly – ~26.3 billion times per second – at the molecules to set them spinning.

    Next, they shot a third laser at the molecules. The purpose of this laser was to excite the valence electrons forming the chemical bonds between the O, C and S atoms. These electrons absorb energy from the laser’s photons, become excited and quit the bonds. This leaves the positively charged atoms close to each other. Since like charges repel, the atoms vigorously push themselves apart and break the molecule up. This process is called a Coulomb explosion.

    At the moment of disintegration, an instrument called a velocity map imaging (VMI) spectrometer records the orientation and direction of motion of the oxygen atom’s positive charge in space. Scientists can work backwards from this reading to determine how the molecule might have been oriented just before it broke up.

    In the third step, the researchers restart the experiment with another set of OCS molecules.

    By going through these steps repeatedly, they were able to capture 651 photos of the OCS molecule in different stages of its rotation.

    These images cannot be interpreted in a straightforward way – the way we interpret images of, say, a rotating ball.

    This is because a ball, even though it is composed of millions of molecules, has enough mass for the force of gravity to dominate proceedings. So scientists can understand why a ball rotates the way it does using just the laws of classical mechanics.

    But at the level of individual atoms and molecules, gravity becomes negligibly weak whereas the other three fundamental forces – including the electromagnetic force – become more prominent. To understand the interactions between these forces and the particles, scientists use the rules of quantum mechanics.

    This is why the images of the rotating molecules look like this:

    Steps of the molecule’s rotation. Credit: DESY, Evangelos Karamatskos

    These are images of the OCS molecule as deduced by the VMI spectrometer. Based on them, the researchers were also able to determine how long the molecule took to make one full rotation.

    As a spinning ball drifts around on the floor, we can tell exactly where it is and how fast it is spinning. However, when studying particles, quantum mechanics prohibits observers from knowing these two things with the same precision at the same time. You probably know this better as Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle.

    So if you have a fix on where the molecule is, that measurement prohibits you from knowing exactly how fast it is spinning. Confronted with this dilemma, scientists used the data obtained by the VMI spectrometer together with the rules of quantum mechanics to calculate the probability that the molecule’s O, C and S atoms were arranged a certain way at a given point of time.

    The images above visualise these probabilities as a colour-coded map. With the position of the central atom (presumably C) fixed, the probability of finding the other two atoms at a certain position is represented on a blue-red scale. The redder a pixel is, the higher the probability of finding an atom there.

    Rotational clock depicting the molecular movie of the observed quantum dynamics of OCS. Credit: doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11122-y

    For example, consider the images at 12 o’clock and 6 o’clock: the OCS molecule is clearly oriented horizontally and vertically, resp. Compare this to the measurement corresponding to the image at 9 o’clock: the molecule appears to exist in two configurations at the same time. This is because, approximately speaking, there is a 50% probability that it is oriented from bottom-left to top-right and a 50% probability that it is oriented from bottom-right to top-left. The 10 o’clock figure represents the probabilities split four different ways. The ones at 4 o’clock and 8 o’clock are even more messy.

    But despite the messiness, the researchers found that the image corresponding to 12 o’clock repeated itself once every 82 picoseconds. Ergo, the molecule completed one rotation every 82 picoseconds.

    This is equal to 731.7 billion rpm. If your car’s engine operated this fast, the resulting centrifugal force, together with the force of gravity, would tear its mechanical joints apart and destroy the machine. The OCS molecule doesn’t come apart this way because gravity is 100 million trillion trillion times weaker than the weakest of the three subatomic forces.

    The researchers’ study was published in the journal Nature Communications on July 29, 2019.