New First Images of the Quantum World
Physicists have directly imaged Landau Levels – the quantum levels that determine electron behavior in a strong magnetic field – for the first time since they were theoretically conceived of by Nobel prize winner Lev Landau in 1930 using scanning tunneling spectroscopy - a spatially resolved probe that interacts directly with the electrons. Scientists at institutions including the University of Warwick and Tohoku University have revealed the internal ring-like structure of these Landau Levels at the surface of a semiconductor.
"This is an exciting step for us, we are really seeing for the first time individual quantum mechanical wave functions of electrons in real materials," said Professor Rudolf Roemer of the Department of Physics at the University of Warwick. "On the face of it this might seem far removed from everyday life. However the question of what defines a kilogram is currently being debated, with the spacing between the rings of these Landau levels acting as a kind of marker for a universal weight. So next time you measure out your sugar to bake a cake, you might unknowingly be making use of these quantum rings."
The research, Robust Nodal Structure of Landau Level Wave Functions Revealed by Fourier Transform Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy, was published in the journal Physical Review Letters. * For more information: Citation: Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 116805 (2012) Journal reference: Physical Review Letters
The Daily Galaxy via University of Warwick
Comments
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Aren't these pictures too small for photons to give us a picture?
If so what makes up the image?
Posted by: Allan W Janssen | October 01, 2012 at 01:00 PM
My guess is that the electron emitted a photon and they caught the light.This would then be that image.Atoms are(in my opinion, theoretically)impossible to see because they're too small and spacious for enough light to be reflected off them.
Posted by: Paradox | October 01, 2012 at 03:39 PM
It's a topographic image. A metal tip is hung over the surface of interest under vacuum. A voltage difference between the two gives information about the electrons in the surface. Remarkable resolution was achieved here.
Posted by: Who is here? | October 01, 2012 at 03:50 PM