Observation of laser-induced fluorescent cooling of a solid

THE possibility that an object might cool through its interaction with radiation was suggested as early as 1929 by Pringsheim 1 . After Landau 2 established the basic thermodynamic consistency of such a process, certain aspects of fluorescent cooling were vigorously pursued 3á¤-11 . In particular, l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 1995-10, Vol.377 (6549), p.500-503
Hauptverfasser: Epstein, Richard I, Buchwald, Melvin I, Edwards, Bradley C, Gosnell, Timothy R, Mungan, Carl E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:THE possibility that an object might cool through its interaction with radiation was suggested as early as 1929 by Pringsheim 1 . After Landau 2 established the basic thermodynamic consistency of such a process, certain aspects of fluorescent cooling were vigorously pursued 3á¤-11 . In particular, laser 'Doppler' cooling of gas-phase atoms and ions has today grown into a robust research area 12á¤-15 . In contrast, attempts to cool solids with light have met with limited success; non-radiative heating effects tend to dominate, and fluorescent cooling has at best resulted in a reduction in overall heating rates 6 . Here we report the experimental realization of net cooling of a solid with radiation. The cooling efficiencies achieved (up to 2%) are more than 10 4 times those observed in Doppler cooling of gases. By pumping a fluorescent cooling element with a high-efficiency diode laser, it may be possible to construct a compact, solid-state optical cryocooler, thereby allowing widespread deployment of cryogenic electronics and detectors in space and elsewhere 16 .
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/377500a0