A Kansas State University physicist is continuing his study of
atomic collisions with the help of a National Science Foundation grant awarded
under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
Brett Esry, professor of physics, received more than $282,000
from the National Science Foundation to study what happens when atoms collide in
groups of three and four. These few-body collisions play an important role in
experiments on ultracold quantum gasses. Esry said a better theoretical
understanding of these collisions could help physicists improve design of
experiments and interpretation of what has been measured. A better understanding
of ultracold quantum gasses can potentially affect such technologically
important phenomena as superconductivity and quantum computing.
Moreover, understanding few-body collisions can improve our
understanding of chemistry in outer space, Esry said. One of the simplest
reactions that forms molecules from atoms occurs when three atoms combine to
form a diatomic molecule. That means these collisions play an important role in
the chemistry of interstellar clouds and planetary atmospheres. At higher
temperatures, these reactions become important to combustion.
Esry and his research group at K-State focus on these
ultracold atomic systems and on understanding the dynamics of atoms and
molecules in intense laser fields. Esry conducts his work in K-State's J.R.
Macdonald Laboratory, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Esry also is receiving a grant from the U.S. Air Force Office
of Scientific Research for the project "Ultracold polar molecules: New phases of
matter for quantum information and quantum control." This effort joins 10
research groups from these institutions: Georgetown University; the James Franck
Institute at the University of Chicago; the Joint Quantum Institute at the
University of Maryland; JILA at the University of Colorado and also affiliated
with the National Institute of Standards and Technology; Durham University in
the United Kingdom; and the University of Innsbruck in Austria.
K-State's Macdonald Laboratory also is the recipient of a
grant from the U.S. Department of Energy made possible by the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act. The nearly $1.3 million grant builds the infrastructure of
the lab, adding a new laser system with nearly 10 times the capability of the
current system, said Itzik Ben-Itzhak, the lab's director.
"This new laser system represents a substantial investment by
the Department of Energy in our lab and its continued productivity, as well as a
clear recognition of Kansas State University's strong commitment to our
program."
With these awards, Esry and the other nine faculty who work in
the lab and the larger atomic, molecular and optical physics group bring nearly
$5 million dollars per year to K-State, Ben-Itzhak said.
Courtesy of K-State Media Relations
Source:
Brett Esry, 785-532-1630,
esry@phys.ksu.edu
News release prepared by:
Erinn
Barcomb-Peterson, 785-532-6415,
ebarcomb@k-state.edu
Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009