2012 Nobel Physics Prize Goes to Quantum Optics Pioneers
Two physicists have won this
year's Nobel Prize in Physics
for opening up the quantum world with experiments that probe the relationship
between light and matter.
French
physicist Serge Haroche and American physicist David Wineland shared the 2012
Nobel physics prize for their work on quantum optics. The prizes were
announced in Sweden
today (Oct. 9) just before 6 a.m. EDT (noon in Sweden). The awards will be
presented there on Dec. 10.
"It's really overwhelming," Haroche said via phone during the
Nobel committee's
press conference announcing the prizes, adding that his first reaction was to
call his children. [In Photos: Nobel Prize Winners 2012]
Haroche is a physicist at Collège de France and Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. He
developed a technique to capture individual particles of light, called photons,
by bouncing them back and forth between mirrors.
"They have been able to detect
photons without destroying them. This is very hard to do," one of the
Nobel Prize committee announcers said.
Wineland, based at the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of
Colorado-Boulder, pioneered a method to probe charged atoms (ions) with laser
photons.
"David Wineland has achieved extraordinary control over the states
of an ion," another Nobel committee member said.
His discoveries have led to
the development of one of the most precise clocks ever made, and could mark the
first steps toward building a quantum computer, which would use tiny quantum
systems to make calculations much quicker than normal computers.
"Serge Haroche and David J. Wineland have independently invented
and developed methods for measuring and manipulating individual particles while
preserving their quantum-mechanical nature, in ways that were previously
thought unattainable," Nobel officials wrote in a statement.
The two researchers have taken different tacks to study some of the
same phenomena, and their work is complementary, Nobel officials said. They
will share the 8 million Swedish kronor prize ($1.2 million).
Both physicists were informed of their win this morning. "I was
walking with my wife," Haroche said of getting the call. "When I saw
the [Swedish] area code, then I sat down." He said he planned to celebrate
the honor with some lunchtime champagne, and then go back to the office.
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