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Scientists Using Lasers To Cool Molecules

An anonymous reader writes "Ever since audiences heard Goldfinger utter the famous line, 'No, Mr. Bond; I expect you to die,' as a laser beam inched its way toward James Bond and threatened to cut him in half, lasers have been thought of as white-hot beams of intensely focused energy capable of burning through anything in their path. Now a team of Yale physicists has used lasers for a completely different purpose, employing them to cool molecules down to temperatures near absolute zero, about -460 degrees Fahrenheit. Their new method for laser cooling, described in the online edition of the journal Nature, is a significant step toward the ultimate goal of using individual molecules as information bits in quantum computing."

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  1. Re:"...lasers have been thought of as white-hot... by Jahava · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wrong? It's not true that the general Bond-watching audience thinks of lasers as being white hot?

    It's pretty obvious: The atoms are stirred, not shaken.