WEST
LAFAYETTE, Ind. – The quest for a single theory that
unites all of the universe's fundamental forces has
thus far eluded physicists, but that has not stopped
a team of them from clearing the way for nanotechnologists
while they look for it.
The
group, which includes Purdue University's Ephraim
Fischbach, has recently completed research that
improves our understanding of how tiny objects
placed very close together can influence each other.
Their experiment, which involves the behavior of
a minuscule gold ball as it moves over different
substances, shows that gravity behaves exactly
as Isaac Newton predicted, even at small scales.
Unfortunately for those in search of the so-called "Theory of Everything," the
finding would seem to rule out the exceptions to
his time-honored theories that physicists believe
might occur when objects are tiny enough.
But in the process, the team has measured another,
less familiar, force that does influence small objects,
and at those scales is more influential than gravity
itself. Their precise observations of this Casimir
force could make life easier for nanotechnologists,
whose tiny creations will be subject to its effects.
"We have measured the Casimir force with greater
accuracy than has ever before been achieved," said
Fischbach, who is a professor of physics in Purdue's
College of Science. "Because this force can push
small objects around, a clearer conception of its
effects will be useful to the nanotech industry.
Anyone creating a nanodevice will have to consider
the Casimir force, just as a car manufacturer has
to consider tire friction and air resistance."
Just as car designers want to minimize the effects
of friction on their vehicles, the research team
wanted to minimize the effects of the Casimir force,
which is expressed as a powerful attraction between
tiny objects that are separated by a few hundred
nanometers, or billionths of a meter. Members of
the team have published other papers on related research;
for more details on how the Casimir force works,
see the previous
story online.
Their new paper, which appears in today's (Monday,
June 20) issue of the scientific journal Physical
Review Letters, represents a step forward not only
in their measurement of the Casimir force, but also
in their ability to see past it to the far fainter
effects of gravity in the nanoworld, which team members
believe could lead to far more profound knowledge
about the universe.
"We're doing work that could have cosmological implications,
but it rests on the behavior of objects too small
to see with the naked eye," said Ricardo S. Decca,
the assistant professor of physics at Indiana University — Purdue
University Indianapolis (IUPUI) who designed the
experiment. "Though measuring the Casimir force has
practical value for today's nanoengineers, what we
are trying to do is find out whether gravity behaves
differently than we think it does if the scale is
small enough. The trouble is that the Casimir force
is so strong at that scale that it virtually drowns
out gravity to the point where it is unobservable."
To
solve the problem, the team placed a tiny sphere
made of gold on the tip of a flexible cantilever,
giving the impression of a ball on the end of a
diving board. They mounted the cantilever on a
mobile stand that could be moved from side to side.
A few hundred nanometers beneath the sphere was
a plate made of two different materials – gold on one side, germanium
on the other – both of which were then covered in
a very thin layer of gold.
Because the influence of the Casimir force is noticeable
over distances of only a few hundred nanometers,
its effect between the gold surfaces of the ball
and the plate were equal regardless of which material
lay beneath the gold layer. But because gravity can
be observed over greater distances, the team was
able to move the sphere back and forth over the plate,
observing how far the cantilever bent over the two
sections.
"Germanium has different mass than gold, so we knew
the cantilever would bend further on one side than
the other if gravity behaved as expected," Fischbach
said. "The question was whether it would bend differently
than Newton predicted because of some undiscovered
exception to gravity's behavior on the quantum scale."
Such a variation, if seen, would have been a revolutionary
discovery because it might have allowed physicists
to perceive the relationship between large-scale
gravity and the tiny quantum world of elementary
charged particles, which has proven elusive.
"To this day, we still have to describe the behavior
of the universe in terms of multiple forces – gravity,
electromagnetism, and the strong and weak nuclear
forces," Fischbach said. "Gravity often seems to
be the odd force out because the others are primarily
visible on the quantum scale. Connecting it with
the quantum world is the holy grail of physics, and
we hoped this experiment would give us a clue of
how to do it."
No deviations from the expected behavior of gravity
showed up in the experiment, but the team has plans
to improve its methods to make even finer observations
next time around.
"We are trying to improve our experiment so it will
be a million times more sensitive than it is now,
which is already far more sensitive over this distance
scale than anything done before," Decca said. "We
think that is feasible with our technique. If we
do find deviations then, it will give us a lead into
what direction to look for the Theory of Everything."
Until then, Fischbach said, the improved understanding
of the Casimir force was an accomplishment that could
assist both his group and more business-oriented
researchers.
"Without compensating for the Casimir force, nanoparticles
might clump together, nanogears might jam and adjacent
nanowires might short out due to its attraction effects," he
said. "This study will hopefully bring a useful piece
of information to design labs all over the still-nascent
nanotechnology industry. And since our team is working
with such small tools, it will likely help us the
next time we redesign our experiment."
In addition to Decca and Fischbach, the team consists
of Daniel Lopez of Lucent Technologies, Dennis Krause
of Wabash College and Chris Jamell of IUPUI. Their
work was funded in part by the U.S. Department of
Energy.
Writer: Chad Boutin, (765) 494-2081, cboutin@purdue.edu
Sources: Ephraim Fischbach, (765) 494-5506, Ephraim@physics.purdue.edu
Ricardo S. Decca, (317) 278-7123, rdecca@iupui.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu
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