optics / Physics / Quantum Mechanics / etc.

Mode-Locked Lasers: The Beating Pulse of Metrology

Your hand opens and closes, opens and closes. If it were always a fist or always stretched open, you would be paralysed. Your deepest presence is in every small contracting and expanding, the two as beautifully balanced and coordinated as birds’ wings. ~Rumi Although we don’t usually notice them, ultrafast pulsed lasers are all around us. They are keep time in the atomic clocks on GPS satellites. Metrologists and chemists use them to measure the properties of atoms and molecules. Astronomers use them to measure the color of light from distant stars. Particle physicists use them in supercollidors. Materials

Condensed Matter / Physics / Quantum Mechanics / etc.

I’m With the (Valence) Band: Band Structure and the Science of Conduction

It was not so very long ago that people thought that semiconductors were part-time orchestra leaders and microchips were very, very small snack foods. ~Geraldine A. Ferraro More is different. ~Philip Warren Anderson Metals conduct electricity. Nonmetals don’t. That’s the conventional wisdom, anyway. In truth, there is a third class of material, called semiconductors. A semiconductor sometimes conducts electricity and sometimes doesn’t. This week, we’ll learn precisely what a semiconductor is and how the forces of quantum mechanics determine whether a material is a conductor, an insulator, or a semiconductor. More is Different Nobel laureate Philip Warren Anderson said