Lukin and his colleagues have stunned the world by stopping pulses of light, storing them, and manipulating them. Staff photos Rose Lincoln/Harvard News Office |
Lukin illuminates quantum scienceUnderstanding the 'supers' and 'ultras' of matterSeptember 29, 2005William J. Cromie
Mikhail Lukin thinks that devices based on quantum science are at the same stage as radios were about 100 years ago. To catch up, the recently tenured professor of physics is stopping and storing light, making artificial atoms behave in new ways, and doing engineering with superconductivity. When quantum does overtake kilowatts, you can expect novel products like quantum transmitters and quantum computers that will change the world the way that radios and electronic computers have. "We are still at the level of basic research, but practical applications may not be too far in the future," says the 33-year-old Moscow native. "By manipulating single photons of light, we should be able to transmit information via codes that cannot be cracked by terrorists, commercial spies, or hackers - "q-mail instead of e-mail." |