Science & Technology - Posted by Tim Green-U. Texas on Monday, May 24, 2010 17:31 - 4 Comments    
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Physicists prove Einstein wrong

A 5-micrometer glass bead levitated in air by a single laser beam from below. This optical trap is formed by the force from the laser beam and the gravitational force on the bead. Physicists used a similar optical trap to study the Brownian motion of a trapped bead in air with ultra-high resolution. (Credit: Tongcang Li)

U. TEXAS-AUSTIN (US)—A century after Albert Einstein said we would never be able to observe the instantaneous velocity of tiny particles as they randomly shake and shimmy, so called Brownian motion, physicists have done just that.





“This is the first observation of the instantaneous velocity of a Brownian particle,” says Mark Raizen, the Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Chair and professor of physics at the University of Texas at Austin. “It’s a prediction of Einstein’s that has been standing untested for 100 years. He proposed a test to observe the velocity in 1907, but said that the experiment could not be done.”

In 1907, Einstein likely did not foresee a time when dust-sized particles of glass could be trapped and suspended in air by dual laser beam “optical tweezers.” Nor would he have known that ultrasonic vibrations from a plate-like transducer would shake those glass beads into the air to be tweezed and measured as they moved in suspension.

Raizen’s research, published in Science, is the first direct test of the equipartition theorem for Brownian particles, one of the basic tenets of statistical mechanics. It is also a step toward cooling glass beads to a state in which they could be used as oscillators or sensors.

The equipartition theorem states that a particles’ kinetic energy—the energy it possesses due to motion—is determined only by its temperature, not its size or mass.

Raizen’s study now proves that the equipartition theorem is true for Brownian particles; in this case, glass beads that were three micrometers across.

Raizen says he and his colleagues can now push the limits, moving the particles closer to a quantum state for observation.

“We’ve now observed the instantaneous velocity of a Brownian particle,” says Raizen. “In some sense, we’re closing a door on this problem in physics. But we are actually opening a much larger door for future tests of the equipartition theorem at the quantum level.”

There, he expects that equipartition theory will break down, leading to new problems and solutions surrounding the quantum mechanics of small particles composed of many atoms.

More news from the University of Texas: www.utexas.edu/news/

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4 Comments

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Nathan
May 24, 2010 17:58

Proved him wrong by performing an experiment that proved him right. Good stuff.

Shailendra
May 24, 2010 21:58

False title! FYI Einstein also said that we would never be able to synthesize the energy of atom i.e. Nuclear Energy. Was he right?

Bill Gates
May 29, 2010 13:52

Einstein: age 20-40 solve the puzzle of the universe. gravity in general relatvity.

Einstein age 40-75 peaked and went No where for last 35 years.

Science is based on Experiment.

theory / experiment. published for world to see.

experiment / theory. published in paper / digital for world to see.

just because said so means absoulutely Nothing… the test is in the experiment. experimental data.

Nature cannot be fooled.

Bill Gates
May 29, 2010 13:55

true / false

yes / no

real / fake… right / wrong.

Albert Einstein / Isaac Newton / Charles Darwin / George W. Bush said so: Must be TRUE.

someone said so means nothing: proof in experiment… experimental data.

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