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"Fundamental Tests of Physics with Optically Trapped Microspheres
"details experiments on studying the Brownian motion of an
optically trapped microsphere with ultrahigh resolution and the
cooling of its motion towards the quantum ground state.
Glass microspheres were trapped in water, air, and vacuum with
optical tweezers; and a detection system that can monitor the
position of a trapped microsphere with Angstrom spatial resolution
and microsecond temporal resolution was developed to study the
Brownian motion of a trapped microsphere in air over a wide range
of pressures. The instantaneous velocity of a Brownian particle, in
particular, was studied for the very first time, and the results
provide direct verification of the Maxwell-Boltzmann velocity
distribution and the energy equipartition theorem for a Brownian
particle. For short time scales, the ballistic regime of Brownian
motion is observed, in contrast to the usual diffusive regime.
In vacuum, active feedback is used to cool the center-of-mass
motion of an optically trapped microsphere from room temperature to
a minimum temperature of about 1.5 mK. This is an important step
toward studying the quantum behaviors of a macroscopic particle
trapped in vacuum.
Fundamental Tests of Physics with Optically Trapped Microspheres
details experiments on studying the Brownian motion of an optically
trapped microsphere with ultrahigh resolution and the cooling of
its motion towards the quantum ground state. Glass microspheres
were trapped in water, air, and vacuum with optical tweezers; and a
detection system that can monitor the position of a trapped
microsphere with Angstrom spatial resolution and microsecond
temporal resolution was developed to study the Brownian motion of a
trapped microsphere in air over a wide range of pressures. The
instantaneous velocity of a Brownian particle, in particular, was
studied for the very first time, and the results provide direct
verification of the Maxwell-Boltzmann velocity distribution and the
energy equipartition theorem for a Brownian particle. For short
time scales, the ballistic regime of Brownian motion is observed,
in contrast to the usual diffusive regime. In vacuum, active
feedback is used to cool the center-of-mass motion of an optically
trapped microsphere from room temperature to a minimum temperature
of about 1.5 mK. This is an important step toward studying the
quantum behaviors of a macroscopic particle trapped in vacuum.
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