Simon Kheifets
University of Texas at Austin
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Featured researches published by Simon Kheifets.
Science | 2010
Tongcang Li; Simon Kheifets; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen
Dancing in the Light Nearly 200 years ago, the botanist Robert Brown noted that pollen particles floating on a liquid displayed a random motion, jittering under the microscope as if the particles were alive. In 1905, Albert Einstein described this Brownian motion in terms of statistical thermodynamics. Now, Li et al. (p. 1673, published online 20 May) use a single, optically trapped silica bead to probe the dynamics of Brownian motion, measuring the predicted instantaneous velocity of the particle and verifying the short-time-scale behavior predicted a century ago. As well as testing fundamental principles of physics, the technique also has practical implications for cooling particles to ultralow temperatures. An optically trapped silica bead in solution is used to probe assumptions underlying statistical theories of Brownian motion. Brownian motion of particles affects many branches of science. We report on the Brownian motion of micrometer-sized beads of glass held in air by an optical tweezer, over a wide range of pressures, and we measured the instantaneous velocity of a Brownian particle. Our results provide direct verification of the energy equipartition theorem for a Brownian particle. For short times, the ballistic regime of Brownian motion was observed, in contrast to the usual diffusive regime. We discuss the applications of these methods toward cooling the center-of-mass motion of a bead in vacuum to the quantum ground motional state.
Nature Physics | 2011
Tongcang Li; Simon Kheifets; Mark G. Raizen
Microscale resonators cooled so that their vibrational motion approaches the quantum limit enable the study of quantum effects in macroscopic systems. An approach that could probe the interface between quantum mechanics and general relativity is now demonstrated by using lasers to suspend a glass microsphere in a vacuum. Cooling of micromechanical resonators towards the quantum mechanical ground state in their centre-of-mass motion has advanced rapidly in recent years1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. This work is an important step towards the creation of ‘Schrodinger cats’, quantum superpositions of macroscopic observables, and the study of their destruction by decoherence. Here we report optical trapping of glass microspheres in vacuum with high oscillation frequencies, and cooling of the centre-of-mass motion from room temperature to a minimum temperature of about 1.5 mK. This new system eliminates the physical contact inherent to clamped cantilevers, and can allow ground-state cooling from room temperature9,10,11,12,13,14,15. More importantly, the optical trap can be switched off, allowing a microsphere to undergo free-fall in vacuum after cooling15. This is ideal for studying the gravitational state reduction16,17,18,19, a manifestation of the apparent conflict between general relativity and quantum mechanics16,20. A cooled optically trapped object in vacuum can also be used to search for non-Newtonian gravity forces at small scales21, measure the impact of a single air molecule14 and even produce Schrodinger cats of living organisms9.
Science | 2014
Simon Kheifets; Akarsh Simha; Kevin Melin; Tongcang Li; Mark G. Raizen
Beyond Brownian Motion On long time scales, the random Brownian motion of particles diffusing in a liquid is well described by theories developed by Einstein and others, but the instantaneous or short time scale behavior has been much harder to observe or analyze. Kheifets et al. (p. 1493) combined ultrasensitive position detection with sufficient data collection to probe the Brownian motion of microbeads in fluids on time scales that are shorter than the characteristic bead-fluid interaction time. The motions of Brownian particles are tracked and evaluated on short time scales where solvent effects play a role. Measurement of the instantaneous velocity of Brownian motion of suspended particles in liquid probes the microscopic foundations of statistical mechanics in soft condensed matter. However, instantaneous velocity has eluded experimental observation for more than a century since Einstein’s prediction of the small length and time scales involved. We report shot-noise–limited, high-bandwidth measurements of Brownian motion of micrometer-sized beads suspended in water and acetone by an optical tweezer. We observe the hydrodynamic instantaneous velocity of Brownian motion in a liquid, which follows a modified energy equipartition theorem that accounts for the kinetic energy of the fluid displaced by the moving bead. We also observe an anticorrelated thermal force, which is conventionally assumed to be uncorrelated.
Optics Express | 2015
Jianyong Mo; Akarsh Simha; Simon Kheifets; Mark G. Raizen
We report on shot-noise limited measurements of the instantaneous velocity distribution of a Brownian particle. Our system consists of a single micron-sized glass sphere held in an optical tweezer in a liquid in equilibrium at room temperature. We provide a direct verification of a modified Maxwell-Boltzmann velocity distribution and modified energy equipartition theorem that account for the kinetic energy of the liquid displaced by the particle. Our measurements confirm the distribution over a dynamic range of more than six orders of magnitude in count-rate and five standard deviations in velocity.
Physical Review E | 2013
Jérôme Duplat; Simon Kheifets; Tongcang Li; Mark G. Raizen; Emmanuel Villermaux
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011
Simon Kheifets; Tongcang Li; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen
Unknown Journal | 2010
Tongcang Li; Simon Kheifets; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen
Frontiers in Optics | 2010
Tongcang Li; Simon Kheifets; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2010
Simon Kheifets; Tongcang Li; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2010
Tongcang Li; Simon Kheifets; David Medellin; Mark G. Raizen