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-   -   New shift seen in cyclotrons (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=321209)

Juicy D. Links 07-02-2004 04:25 PM

New shift seen in cyclotrons
 
This is a interesting read got me thinking,



A subtle change in the motion of charged particles in magnetic fields has been discovered by physicists in the US. David Pritchard and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have shown that the resulting shift in the cyclotron frequency of the particle can be used to measure its quantum state (Nature 430 58). The effect could be used to measure the dipole moments of molecular ions, test fundamental symmetries, and weigh individual chemical bonds.



Quadrupole electrodes

Cyclotrons are routinely employed to compare the masses of molecules and study chemical reaction rates. The cyclotron frequency is given by the simple formula qB/m, where q and m are the charge and mass of the particle and B is the magnetic field. However, Pritchard and co-workers have discovered that this formula needs to be tweaked for particles that can be polarized. This happens because an electric dipole moment is induced in the particle and the two ends of the dipole move at slightly different speeds. The end result is that the cyclotron frequency is shifted by a small amount.

The MIT team found that this frequency shift was about 1 part in 109 for a CO+ ion. Moreover, since the polarizability of the ion depends on its internal quantum state, the cyclotron frequency changes whenever the ion jumps to a different internal state. By measuring these changes, Pritchard and co-workers were able to calculate the dipole moment of the molecule. They were also able to determine the quantum state of the molecule by simply measuring its cyclotron frequency.

"This is a very general effect that had not been recognized before, and it needs to be taken into account in various experiments," team member James Thompson told PhysicsWeb.

These include fundamental tests of CPT (charge-parity-time reversal) symmetry and experiments that use molecular ions to search for an electron dipole moment.

NickPapageorgio 07-02-2004 04:28 PM

I bet that has had people scratching their heads for years.

pornstar2pac 07-02-2004 04:29 PM

I was thinking the same thing

Jakke PNG 07-02-2004 04:31 PM

I thought Cyclotron was a character in Transformers.

fudpuck 07-02-2004 04:34 PM

Hmm.

:glugglug

NickPapageorgio 07-02-2004 04:35 PM

I mean for years there have probably been anomalies in controlled tests that noone could figure why right? Go figure...

Juicy D. Links 07-02-2004 04:36 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by NickPapageorgio
I mean for years there have probably been anomalies in controlled tests that noone could figure why right? Go figure...

good point

Big Cheese 07-02-2004 05:03 PM

I wrote that :Graucho

MrIzzz 07-02-2004 05:04 PM

:1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh

galleryseek 07-02-2004 05:09 PM

Ehhh that article is written by a washed up second class Princeton graduate.

First of all, the cyclotrons aren't subjective to the frequencies of dynamic dipoles. And second of all, the isotopical values are relative to the aligned positioning of the CO+ ion particles, which only further enforces the fact that cyclotrons stay static in nature.

OzMan 07-02-2004 05:49 PM

This is yet another spam thread for Juicy's new paysite....

http://www.cyclotronbabes.com

Marcus Aurelius 07-02-2004 06:15 PM

well shit..there goes my weekend.


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