It’s practically a law that no experiment ever works better than theory says it should, but that’s exactly what happened in atomic physics in the late 1980s, as Chad Orzel describes in the second instalment of his three-part history of laser cooling. The first part can be read here
Colder: how physicists beat the theoretical limit for laser cooling and laid the foundations for a quantum revolution
05 Sep 2023
Chad Orzel is a popular-science author and chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Union College in the US. He has a PhD in chemical physics from the University of Maryland, College Park, where he studied laser cooling at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in the lab of Bill Phillips, who shared the 1997 Nobel Prize for Physics