Tractor Beam? 8
shreve912 writes: "No captured Romulan Birds of Prey just yet, but the beam consisting of a helix of twisting laser light is able to seize hold of objects as small as a protein molecule. Scientists believe it will be an invaluable tool for manipulating parts of living cells or components of micro-machines. Holodecks and Borg implants can't be far off! Check out the article."
Tell us what we want to know! (Score:2)
So we know the approximate lower bound of the tractor beam's grip. What's the upper bound? Enquiring minds want to know!
Dancin Santa
Is this really a tractor beam? (Score:1)
Is this a tractor beam? I would think that to qualify as such it would need to draw the particles toward the source of the beam.
It does sound as if movement perpendicular to the laser is possible. So, maybe one day, with two of these focused on a single point, we could draw this point closer. I'll have to shift my vision of single-ray tractor beams to double-ray beams.
I think they did that on the Simpsons once, Homer was too fat for one beam to lift him. They're visionaries, down at FOX.
My optics are a little rusty (Score:1)
Now, I may be wrong, but it seems to me that the longest wavelength laser still works in the infrared region of the spectrum, nowhere near the metre-range of radio waves, so no appreciable diffraction would occur to short-wavelength light on macroscopic objects.
Also, I would like to know why the more intense light would incinerate objects. The light is not being absorbed, therefore its energy of h_nu is not being converted to heat. If the photon is just being diffracted, then more photons would mean more diffracted photons, and more "rebound", but not more heat.
Re:Tell us what we want to know! (Score:2)
Well, according to the article, it's all on the "microscopic level"... so my guess would be the upper bound and the lower bound are of the same order of magnitude.
Ryan T. Sammartino
Re:Is this really a tractor beam? (Score:2)
Dancin Santa
Short introduction to Optical Tweezers (Score:3)
Re:Tell us what we want to know! (Score:4)
The force results from the object changing the direction of propagation of photons, and thus changing their momentum. The recoil from this change is what moves the particle. The force is on the same order of magnitutde as the radiation pressure on an opaque object.
Re:Tell us what we want to know! (Score:1)
Are there any other forces that could be exerted in a focused manner (obviously this would rule out magnetism and gravity) that could be used to "latch onto" a generic object and direct it on a macroscopic level?
Dancin Santa