Physicists Xiaoqin "Elaine" Li, Gennady Shvets and their colleagues have been exploring new ways to manipulate light on the nanoscale. In a paper published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they describe work that could lead to better biological sensors and improved devices for optical communications and computing.
One possible future application might be an optical switch, analogous to a transistor in electronics except that it uses single photons to encode and process information instead of electrons. Another potential application might be a nanoscale ruler to measure very small distances in living systems in real time. Biologists could use such a sensor to study a broad range of processes including gene regulation, protein folding, protein interactions, metabolism and signaling.
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