home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2909>
- <title>
- Dec. 30, 1991: Adventures in Lilliput
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 75
- Adventures in Lilliput
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Extraordinary new laser tools and microscopes are enabling
- researchers to observe and manipulate a breathtaking microworld
- </p>
- <p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Think small. Now think smaller still. For in the
- lilliputian wonderland that scientists have begun to explore,
- a grain of rice looms as large as an asteroid, a droplet of
- water as wide as an inland sea.
- </p>
- <p> Using powerful new tools, biologists at the University of
- Chicago have gently sliced through a red blood cell to peer at
- individual protein molecules clinging to its inner membrane. At
- the California Institute of Technology, chemists have watched
- in wonder as a hydrogen atom romances an oxygen away from a
- carbon dioxide molecule. And at Stanford University, physicist
- Steven Chu has mastered techniques for levitating millions of
- sodium atoms inside a stainless-steel canister and releasing
- them all at once in luminescent fountains. Of late, Chu and his
- colleagues have amused themselves by stretching a
- double-stranded DNA molecule as taut as a tent rope. When they
- release one end, the molecule recoils like a miniature rubber
- band. Boing!
- </p>
- <p> Just as improvements in navigational tools opened the
- oceans to sailing ships, so a new generation of precision
- instruments has exposed a breathtaking microworld to scientific
- exploration. Aided by computers that convert blizzards of data
- into images on a screen, these instruments are helping
- scientists see--and even tinker with--everything from living
- cells to individual atoms. "This technology is still pretty
- crude," marvels Chu. "Who knows what we may be able to do with
- it in a few years' time."
- </p>
- <p> Among the instruments generating excitement:
- </p>
- <p> FEMTOSECOND LASERS. Like strobes flickering across a
- submicroscopic dance floor, these devices can freeze the
- gyrations of atoms and molecules with flashes of light. The
- lasers are being used to study everything from how sodium joins
- with other atoms to form salts to how plants convert sunlight
- into energy through the process of photosynthesis. Physicists
- from California's Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory reported that
- they used such a laser to take a "snapshot" of the chemical
- reaction that is the first step in visual perception. This
- reaction, triggered when light hits the retina of the eye, had
- never before been directly observed. And with good reason. The
- reaction was clocked by the L.B.L. team at 200 femtoseconds,
- which are millionths of a billionth of a second. How fast is
- that? Well, in little more than a second, light can travel all
- the way from the moon to the earth, but in a femtosecond it
- traverses a distance that is but one hundredth the width of a
- human hair. "This sort of time scale is almost impossible to
- imagine," exclaims L.B.L. director Charles Shank, who helped
- pioneer the technology.
- </p>
- <p> LASER TRAPS. Beams of laser light can also be used to
- ensnare groups of atoms, which can then be moved around at will.
- But because atoms at room temperature zoom about at supersonic
- speed, they first have to be slowed down. In 1985 the invention
- of "optical molasses" by a research team at AT&T Bell
- Laboratories provided an ingenious solution to the problem. As
- its name implies, optical molasses uses light to create enough
- electromagnetic "drag" to bring wildly careering atoms to a
- screeching halt. Because the atoms lose virtually all their
- kinetic energy, they approach the perfect stillness of absolute
- zero, the frozen state at which motion ceases.
- </p>
- <p> At such supercold temperatures, scientists believe, matter
- may start to exhibit bizarre and interesting new properties.
- Certainly, cold atoms can be trapped and manipulated in a
- variety of cunning ways. The fountains created by Chu, for
- example, are enabling scientists to observe atoms in free fall
- and thus measure gravitational force with unprecedented
- accuracy. Fountains are also helping scientists measure the
- oscillations of cesium atoms more precisely than ever before,
- and cesium atoms are to atomic clocks--the world's most
- precise timepieces--what quartz crystals are to wristwatches.
- </p>
- <p> OPTICAL TWEEZERS. With a single beam of infrared laser
- light, scientists can seize and manipulate everything from DNA
- molecules to bacteria and yeast without harming them. Among
- other things, optical tweezers can keep a tiny organism swimming
- in place while scientists study its paddling flagella under a
- microscope. Optical tweezers can also reach right through cell
- membranes to grab specialized structures known as organelles and
- twirl them around. Currently, researchers are using the
- technology to measure the mechanical force exerted by a single
- molecule of myosin, one of the muscle proteins responsible for
- motion. Scientists are also examining the swimming skill of an
- individual sperm. "One day," imagines Michael Berns, director
- of the Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic at the
- University of California at Irvine, "we may be able to pick up
- a live sperm and stuff it right into an egg."
- </p>
- <p> SCANNING TUNNELING MICROSCOPES. Invented only 10 years
- ago, these extraordinary instruments probe surfaces with a
- metallic tip only a few atoms wide. At very short distances,
- electrons can traverse the gap between the tip and the surface,
- a phenomenon known as tunneling. This generates a tiny current
- that can be used to move atoms and molecules around with
- pinpoint precision. Thus last year physicists from IBM's Almaden
- Research Center manipulated 35 xenon atoms on a nickel surface
- to spell out their company's logo. They have also fashioned
- seven atoms into a minuscule beaker in which they can observe
- chemical reactions at an atomic level, and they devised a
- working version of a single-atom electronic switch that, in
- theory, could replace the transistor. Though some of the
- achievements seem whimsical--constructing a miniature map of
- the western hemisphere out of gold atoms, for instance--such
- stunts demonstrate a technique that may eventually be used to
- store computer data on unimaginably small devices.
- </p>
- <p> ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPES. Like STMs, these instruments
- possess an atomically small tip that resembles a phonograph
- needle. An AFM reads a surface by touching it, tracing the
- outlines of individual atoms in much the same way a blind person
- reads Braille. Because the electromagnetic force applied by the
- tip is so small, an AFM can delicately probe a wide range of
- surfaces, including the membranes of living cells. Even more
- astounding, by applying slightly more pressure, scientists can
- use an AFM tip as a dissecting tool that lets them scrape off
- the top of cells without destroying their interior structures.
- Scientists have used an AFM to detail the biochemical cascade
- that results in blood clotting; to examine the atomic structure
- of seashells; and to uncover the tiny communication channels
- that link one cell to another. "We're looking at scales so
- small," says University of Chicago physiologist Morton Arnsdorf,
- "they almost defy comprehension."
- </p>
- <p> Without question, these recent additions to the scientific
- tool kit hold tremendous practical promise. A more accurate
- atomic clock, for instance, is not just a curiosity. "If we can
- put better clocks into orbit," notes William Phillips, a
- physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology,
- "we might improve the global positioning system enough to land
- airplanes in pea-soup fog." Even now it is not difficult to
- imagine that STMs might be employed by the semiconductor
- industry to produce minuscule electronic devices, that optical
- tweezers might be used by surgeons to correct defects in a
- single cell or that femtosecond lasers might eventually be
- harnessed to control, as well as monitor, chemical reactions.
- Speculates University of Chicago chemical physicist Steven
- Sibener: "In the future, combinations of these magic wands may
- become much more powerful than using them one by one."
- </p>
- <p> Such marvels, of course, will not materialize overnight.
- Cautions IBM physicist Donald Eigler: "The single-atom switch
- looks small until you realize it took a whole roomful of
- equipment to make it work.'' Still, computer chips the size of
- bacteria and motors as small as molecules of myosin are rapidly
- moving out of the world of fantasy and into the realm of
- possibility. "For years, scientists have been taking atoms and
- molecules apart in order to understand them," says futurist K.
- Eric Drexler, president of the Foresight Institute in Palo Alto,
- Calif. "Now it's time to start figuring out how to put them
- together to make useful things." With such powerful instruments
- to help them, scientists and engineers may finally be getting
- ready to do just that.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-