World's Smallest Magnifying Glass

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World's Smallest Magnifying Glass.London, Nov 12.- For centuries, scientists believed that light, like all waves, couldn't be focused down smaller than its wavelength, just under a millionth of a meter.

Now, researchers led by the University of Cambridge have created the world's smallest magnifying glass, which focuses light a billion times more tightly, down to the scale of single atoms.

In collaboration with colleagues from Spain, the team used highly conductive gold nanoparticles to make the world's tiniest optical cavity, so small that only a single molecule can fit within it.

The cavity, called a 'pico-cavity' by the researchers, consists of a bump in a gold nanostructure the size of a single atom, and confines light to less than a billionth of a meter.

The results, reported in the journal Science, open up new ways to study the interaction of light and matter, including the possibility of making the molecules in the cavity undergo new sorts of chemical reactions, which could enable the development of entirely new types of sensors.

According to the researchers, building nanostructures with single atom control was extremely challenging. 'We had to cool our samples to -260°C in order to freeze the scurrying gold atoms,' they said.

The researchers shone laser light on the sample to build the pico-cavities, allowing them to watch single atom movement in real time.

The findings have the potential to open a whole new field of light-catalyzed chemical reactions, allowing complex molecules to be built from smaller components. Additionally, there is the possibility of new optic-mechanical data storage devices, allowing information to be written and read by light and stored in the form of molecular vibrations.


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