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Phillips,
William D
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full WILLIAM DANIEL PHILLIPS (b. Nov. 5, 1948, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., U.S.),
American physicist whose experiments using laser light to cool and trap
atoms earned him the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1997. He shared the award
with Steven Chu and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, who also developed methods of
laser cooling and atom trapping. Phillips received his doctorate in physics (1976) and completed his postdoctoral research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1978 he joined the staff of the National Bureau of Standards (now the National Institute of Standards and Technology) in Gaithersburg, Md., and it was there that he conducted his award-winning research. Building on Chu's work, Phillips developed new and improved methods for measuring the temperature of laser-cooled atoms. In 1988 he discovered that the atoms reached a temperature six times lower than the predicted theoretical limit. Cohen-Tannoudji refined the theory to explain the new results, and he and Phillips further investigated methods of trapping atoms cooled to even lower temperatures. One
result of the development of laser-cooling techniques was the first observation,
in 1995, of the Bose-Einstein condensate, a new state of matter originally
predicted 70 years earlier by Albert Einstein and the Indian physicist
Satyendra Nath Bose. In this state atoms are so chilled and so slow that
they, in effect, merge and behave as one single quantum entity that is
much larger than any individual atom. |
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