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6 November 2008 University of Boston Detecting Tiny Twists with a Nanomachine |
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| Researchers at Boston University working with collaborators in Germany , France and Korea have developed a nanoscale torsion resonator that measures miniscule amounts of twisting or torque in a metallic nanowire. This device, the size of a speck of dust, might enable measurements of the untwisting of DNA and have applications in spintronics, fundamental physics, chemistry and biology.
Spin-induced torque is central to understanding experiments, from the measurement of angular momentum of photons to the measurement of the gyromagnetic factor of metals and a very miniaturized - about 6 microns -- version of a gyroscope that measures the torques produced by electrons changing their spin states. It can be used to uncover new spin-dependent fundamental forces in particle physics, according to Raj Mohanty, Boston University Associate Professor of Physics. The team developed a microscopic spin-torsion device fabricated by electron beam lithography and nanomachining that mechanically measures the changes in spin states in a magnetic field. This device was operated at one tenth of a degree close to absolute zero. "The measurements with a nanoscale torsion resonator will be useful in uncovering new fundamental forces and, in theory, for characterizing torque producing molecules and DNA." said Mohanty. Mohanty's research collaborators for the paper are Guiti Zolfagharkhani, then a graduate student at Boston University's Department of Physics, Alexi Gaidarzhy then a graduate student of BU's Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Pascal Degiovanni of the Ecole Normale Superieure and Universite de Lyon in France, Stefan Kettemann of Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany and Peter Fulde at the Asia Pacific Center for Theoretical Physics in Namgu Pohang, Korea. Source: University of Boston /... |
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