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by Karen Heyman

TECHNOLOGY

Building a Better Optical Trap
From a chance discovery 40 years ago comes the ability to watch polymerases at work

Email: Karen Heyman - kheyman@the-scientist.com
The Scientist 2005, 19(12):26

Published 20 June 2005

Shortly after the invention of the laser, Bell Labs physicist Arthur Ashkin began exploring the range of the new devices. Could the force of light in the beam move an object, much as a finger pushes a ball, he wondered? If they did, it would confirm an old theory that had intrigued him since his college days during WWII.[1] "It was known a laser could push [a particle], the question was, could you observe it," Ashkin recalls. But he discovered something else, as well: "I discovered when I did that, that there were forces that were pulling the particles into the high-intensity regions of the beam."


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