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Monday, May 5, 2008 | Science : Astronomy | print version Print | Comments

Document Record-setting Laser May Aid Searches for Earthlike Planets

by Physorg.com

Thanks to SPS for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.physorg.com/news129217511.html

Comb
Experimental data from a NIST "gap-toothed" frequency comb that are false colored to indicate the range from low power (red) to high power (blue). The comb is specially designed for astronomy. Each "tooth" is a precisely known frequency, and the teeth are widely separated (by 20 gigahertz) in comparison to a standard comb. Credit: M. Kirchner & S. Diddams/NIST

Scientists at the University of Konstanz in Germany and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated an ultrafast laser that offers a record combination of high speed, short pulses and high average power. The same NIST group also has shown that this type of laser, when used as a frequency comb—an ultraprecise technique for measuring different colors of light—could boost the sensitivity of astronomical tools searching for other Earthlike planets as much as 100 fold.

The dime-sized laser, to be described Thursday, May 8, at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics,* emits 10 billion pulses per second, each lasting about 40 femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second), with an average power of 650 milliwatts. For comparison, the new laser produces pulses 10 times more often than a standard NIST frequency comb while producing much shorter pulses than other lasers operating at comparable speeds. The new laser is also 100 to 1000 times more powerful than typical high-speed lasers, producing clearer signals in experiments. The laser was built by Albrecht Bartels at the Center for Applied Photonics of the University of Konstanz.

Among its applications, the new laser can be used in searches for planets orbiting distant stars. Astronomers look for slight variations in the colors of starlight over time as clues to the presence of a planet orbiting the star. The variations are due to the small wobbles induced in the star's motion as the orbiting planet tugs it back and forth, producing minute shifts in the apparent color (frequency) of the starlight. Currently, astronomers' instruments are calibrated with frequency standards that are limited in spectral coverage and stability.

Frequency combs could be more accurate calibration tools, helping to pinpoint even smaller variations in starlight caused by tiny Earthlike planets. Such small planets would cause color shifts equivalent to a star wobble of just a few centimeters per second. Current instruments can detect, at best, a wobble of about 1 meter per second.

Standard frequency combs have "teeth" that are too finely spaced for astronomical instruments to read. The faster laser is one approach to solving this problem. In a separate paper,** the NIST group and astronomer Steve Osterman at the University of Colorado at Boulder describe how, by bouncing the light between sets of mirrors a particular distance apart, they can eliminate periodic blocks of teeth to create a gap-toothed comb. This leaves only every 10th or 20th tooth, making an ideal ruler for astronomy.

Both approaches have advantages for astronomical planet finding and related applications. The dime-sized laser is very simple in construction and produces powerful and extremely well-defined comb teeth. On the other hand, the filtering approach can cover a broader range of wavelengths. Four or five filtering cavities in parallel would provide a high-precision comb of about 25,000 evenly spaced teeth that spans the visible to near-infrared wavelengths (400 to 1100 nanometers), NIST physicist Scott Diddams says.

Osterman says he is pursuing the possibility of testing such a frequency comb at a ground-based telescope or launching a comb on a satellite or other space mission. Other possible applications of the new laser include remote sensing of gases for medical or atmospheric studies, and on-the-fly precision control of high-speed optical communications to provide greater versatility in data and time transmissions. The application of frequency combs to planet searches is of international interest and involves a number of major institutions such as the Max-Planck Institute for Quantum Optics and Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

References:

* A. Bartels, D. Heinecke and S.A. Diddams. Passively mode-locked 10 GHz femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser with >1 mW of power per frequency comb mode. Post-deadline paper presented at Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO), San Jose, Calif., May 4-9, 2008.

** D.A. Braje, M. S. Kirchner, S. Osterman, T. Fortier and S. A. Diddams. Astronomical spectrograph calibration with broad-spectrum frequency combs. To appear in European Physics Journal D. (Posted online at arXiv:0803.0565)

Source: NIST

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1. Comment #175715 by LeeC on May 5, 2008 at 11:40 pm

 avatar
emits 10 billion pulses per second, each lasting about 40 femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second), with an average power of 650 milliwatts


Now that is just silly numbers... love it.

Rock on - lets find some planets.

Lee

Other Comments by LeeC

2. Comment #175718 by JamesDB on May 5, 2008 at 11:44 pm

 avatarI always like hearing about technology like this. The idea of finding planets that can sustain life really helps boost our case in the sense that if we find life elsewhere will that shut the creationists up?
Maybe this new technology can find the evidence needed to convince creationists they've got no arguments left.

(if you can't tell what my avatar is its jesus floating above his apostles with the ghostbusters holding him with a confinement beam)

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3. Comment #175724 by LeeC on May 5, 2008 at 11:52 pm

 avatarHi James,

The idea of finding planets that can sustain life really helps boost our case in the sense that if we find life elsewhere will that shut the creationists up?


They will just reject the evidence just like the theory of evolution... after all, it is only light that we are receiving - if they can reject evidence like fossils that you can touch what chance is their when it is merely light.

Lee
PS
Like the avatar

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4. Comment #175727 by tacitus on May 5, 2008 at 11:56 pm

Maybe this new technology can find the evidence needed to convince creationists they've got no arguments left.


I can't fault your optimism, but from conversations I've had on Christian message boards, I fully expect the vast majority of them not to miss a beat should news of the discovery of alien life be announced.

I even had someone tell me that if an alien spaceship landed on Earth to hand over eyewitness recordings of our history unfolding over the past few million years, he would have to believe that the aliens were lying and fabricating the evidence.

Now that's what I call faith... unfortunately.

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5. Comment #175729 by JamesDB on May 6, 2008 at 12:00 am

 avatarHow irritating is that, to simply stand by your point of view no matter what. I guess we are going to have to wait for these crazies to get old and die off to rid ourselves of that type of mindset. How do you stop someone like that from poisoning their children's minds? Especially when they think what we have to say is the real poison.

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6. Comment #175797 by rod-the-farmer on May 6, 2008 at 3:55 am

 avatarI checked the original article, and this one is pretty much a copy. What I would be interested to see is something that could explain to us non-PHD types how a laser that emits light, can help analyse a star which also emits light. My elementary knowledge of physics implies you need a light detector, not a second emitter. Can someone suggest a link that would explain how this works ? Is this another one of those interference things ? Maybe with a diagram ?

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7. Comment #175799 by epeeist on May 6, 2008 at 4:05 am

 avatarComment #175797 by rod-the-farmer
Can someone suggest a link that would explain how this works ? Is this another one of those interference things ? Maybe with a diagram ?
Here you go - http://www.rp-photonics.com/frequency_combs.html

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8. Comment #175816 by logicalbasedreality on May 6, 2008 at 5:28 am

 avatarI love this website.

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9. Comment #175982 by bladesman on May 6, 2008 at 10:13 am

 avatarSo pretty soon, astronomers could literally be looking for extra-solar planets with a fine tooth comb?! ;o)

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10. Comment #176096 by MorituriMax on May 6, 2008 at 2:29 pm

 avatar@LeeC,
re:crazy numbers.. did they HAVE to end with such a mundane number as 650 milliwatts after all the other neat ones? Why not 650 milli-oompa-loompa-watts..?

Other Comments by MorituriMax

11. Comment #176158 by chuckgoecke on May 6, 2008 at 5:42 pm

 avatarWager: An earth classed planet with chlorophyll signature is found within 10 years.

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12. Comment #176747 by Rawhard Dickins on May 7, 2008 at 11:57 pm

 avatarRod

The laser generates frequencies that are compared to incoming light from stars with potential planets.
Any regular variation indicates movement due to doppler shift which may indicate an orbiting planet.
The frequency combs are the result of the very narrow pulses produced by the lasers hence the silly numbers.
Correct me if I'm wrong chaps.

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