Most of us don’t think of atoms as having their own unique vibrations, but they do. In fact, it’s a feature so fundamental to nature’s building blocks that a team of University of Washington researchers recently observed and used this phenomenon in their research study. By studying the light atoms emitted when stimulated by a laser, they were able to detect vibrations sometimes referred to as atomic “breathing.”

  • @Candelestine
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    31 year ago

    I mean, the way they worded it was fine. The sentence is meaningless when read the other way. Otherwise these “light atoms” are being emitted when what is stimulated by the laser?

    Not the authors fault if some in his audience won’t even finish reading a whole sentence.

    • @SocializedHermit
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      31 year ago

      Maybe you should have read the article: “By applying a precise pulse of laser light to one of the quantum dots, an electron is knocked away from the tungsten diselenide atom’s nucleus. This briefly creates a quasiparticle known as an exciton. This exciton is composed of the negatively charged electron and the corresponding positively charged hole in the opposite sheet. Because they are strongly bound, the electron quickly returns to the atom. When it does this, it releases a single photon encoded with very specific quantum information.”

      • @Candelestine
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        21 year ago

        Yes, I am merely saying that the author’s original wording is perfectly acceptable, and any confusion stemming from it is 100% the fault of the reader.

          • @Candelestine
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            11 year ago

            The word “light” all on its own is fine as well.

    • @surewhynotlem
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      11 year ago

      undefined> The sentence is meaningless when read the other way

      They stimulated the researchers using a laser, and the researchers emitted the ‘light atoms’. And the conclusion of the study is that researchers are perverts.