Research Highlights

  • Illustration of exotic massless quantum particles called Weyl particles.
    The Rey and Ye groups discovered the strange rules of聽quantum baseball聽earlier this year. But now, quantum baseball games happen faster, and players (dipolar particles) are no longer free to move or stand wherever they want. Players must not only be stronger to jump and catch the balls (photons), but also more organized. At the same time, they must be good spinners. And, only a small amount of disorder is tolerated! The fast spinning of the players and their fixed positions have made quantum baseball a whole new game!
  • Computer simulation of a tidal disruption event involving a pair of supermassive black holes in the center of a recently merged galaxy.
    Galaxy mergers routinely occur in our Universe. And, when they take place, it takes years for the supermassive black holes at their centers to merge into a new, bigger supermassive black hole. However, a very interesting thing can happen when two black holes get close enough to orbit each other every 3鈥4 months, something that happens just before the two black holes begin their final desperate plunge into each other.
  • Laser light knocks both neutral and charged bismuth atoms off a disk of bismuth metal.
    Graduate student Mike Thompson of the Weber group wants to understand the basic science of taking carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by burning fossil fuels and converting it back into useful fuels. People could then use these fuels to generate electricity, heat homes and office buildings, power automobiles and trains, fly airplanes, and drive the industrial processes of modern life.
  • Image illustrating the simultaneously changing the direction of atoms spins.
    For a long time, there鈥檚 been a mystery concerning how tiny interactions between individual atoms could lead to really big changes in a whole cloud of independent-minded particles. The reason this behavior is mysterious is that the atoms interact weakly, and only when they are very close to each other. Yet, the atoms clear across the cloud seem to know when it鈥檚 time to participate in some big-deal quantum behavior such as simultaneously all changing the direction of their spins.
  • Light-emitting molecular arrangement illustration.
    Far-red fluorescent light emitted from proteins could one day illuminate the inner workings of life. But before that happens, scientists like Fellow Ralph Jimenez must figure out how fluorescent proteins鈥 light-emitting structures work. As part of this effort, Jimenez wants to answer a simple question: How do we design red fluorescent proteins to emit longer-wavelength, or redder, light?
  • Artist鈥檚 conception of an infrared frequency comb 鈥渨atching鈥 the reaction of a molecule.
    Using frequency comb spectroscopy, the Ye group has directly observed transient intermediate steps in a chemical reaction that plays a key role in combustion, atmospheric chemistry, and chemistry in the interstellar medium. The group was able to make this first-ever measurement because frequency combs generate a wide range of laser wavelengths in ultrafast pulses. These pulses made it possible for the researchers to 鈥渟ee鈥 every step in the chemical reaction of OH + CO 鈫 HOCO 鈫 CO2 + H.
  • The ultimate radar detector (a.k.a. the 3D velocity map-imaging apparatus).
    The Nesbitt group has invented a nifty technique for exploring the physics and chemistry of a gas interacting with molecules on the surface of a liquid. The group originally envisioned the technique because it鈥檚 impossible to overestimate the importance of understanding surface chemistry. For instance, ozone depletion in the atmosphere occurs because of chemical reactions of hydrochloric acid on the surface of ice crystals and aerosols in the upper atmosphere. Interstellar chemistry takes place on the surface of tiny grains of dust.
  • Figure demonstrating the behavior of strontium atoms in a crystal of light.
    Exciting new theory from the Rey group reveals the profound effects of electron interactions on the flow of electric currents in metals. Controlling currents of strongly interacting electrons is critical to the development of tomorrow鈥檚 advanced microelectronics systems, including spintronics devices that will process data faster, use less power than today鈥檚 technology, and operate in conditions where quantum effects predominate.
  • Image illustrating the the tidal disruption of a star by a supermassive black hole.
    When an ordinary star like our Sun wanders very close to a supermassive black hole, it鈥檚 very bad news for the star. The immense gravitational pull of the black hole (i.e., tidal forces) overcomes the forces of gravity holding the star together and literally pulls the star apart. Over time, the black hole swallows half of the star stuff, while the other half escapes into the interstellar medium. This destructive encounter between a supermassive black hole and a star is known as a tidal disruption event.
  • An accretion disk forms stars around a black hole's equator at the same time the black hole is feasting on vast amounts of matter.
    Fellow Mitch Begelman鈥檚 new theory says it鈥檚 possible to form stars while a supermassive black hole consumes massive amounts of stellar debris and other interstellar matter. What鈥檚 more, there鈥檚 evidence that this is exactly what happened around the black hole at the center of the Milky Way some 4鈥6 million years ago, according to Associate Fellow Ann-Marie Madigan.
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