Slowing Down Atoms And Biomolecules With Lasers
Tokyokid writes "In an interview on Berkeley Groks, Nobel Laureate Steve Chu talks about cooling atoms down using lasers. In another words, the atoms or molecules are slowed down in this "optical molasses." Scientists now are using these techniques to study the interactions and forces between biomolecules. These studies may give a better understanding of how life works on the molecular level."
The idea is that you want to reduce the average velocity of these atoms down to a very very low speed and that's what they really mean by cooling the temperatures and measuring the average motional energy of these atoms. You do this by shining light on the atoms.
As the light scatters from the atoms, they cool down. The trick is to arrange the light to preferentially scatter off of photons opposing the motion and this is done simply by tuning the frequency of the light so that when the atoms are moving towards this laser beam, it has a frequency shift called the Doppler shift that actually shifts it more into resonance.
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According to this, about 100 billionths a degree above absolute zero. This just turned up with a quick google and it has most likely gotten lower since then. As for refridgeration, not in the near... or distant future.