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Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 253601 (2005) [4 pages]

Controllable Snail-Paced Light in Biological Bacteriorhodopsin Thin Film

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Pengfei Wu* and D. V. G. L. N. Rao
Physics Department, University of Massachusetts, Boston, Massachusetts 02125, USA

Received 17 May 2005; published 12 December 2005

See accompanying Physics Focus

We observe that the group velocity of light is reduced to an extremely low value of 0.091  mm/s in a biological thin film of bacteriorhodopsin at room temperature. By exploiting unique features of a flexible photoisomerization process for coherent population oscillation, the velocity is all-optically controlled over an enormous span, from snail-paced to normal light speed, with no need of modifying the characteristics of the incident pulse. Because of the large quantum yield for the photoreaction in this biochemical system, the ultraslow light is observed even at low light levels of microwatts, indicating high energy efficiency.

© 2005 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.253601
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.253601
PACS:
42.50.Gy, 42.65.−k, 42.70.Jk, 82.50.Nd

*To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Electronic address: 5pengfei@gmail.com