Date: January 20, 2015 Source: The Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)
Miniature
light detectors in frog eyes known as retinal rod cells are directly
and unambiguously shown to detect single photons of light -- an
astounding sensitivity considering that a humble 60 watt light bulb
spews out a staggering 1020 photons per second. Using a specially
developed light source that generates single photons, a new A*STAR study
finds that a rod cell has an almost one-in-three chance of detecting an
incoming photon.
Scientists
have known for some time that rod cells are sensitive to single
photons. This was inferred based on statistical modeling in studies that
used classical light sources such as lamps, lasers and light-emitting
diodes that generate a statistical distribution of photons. In contrast,
the light source developed by Leonid Krivitsky and co-workers at the
A*STAR Data Storage Institute and A*STAR Institute of Medical Biology is
a truly single-photon source and hence eliminates the need to
statistically analyze measurement results, thus enhancing measurement
accuracy1.
"Our
method is both direct and universal," notes Krivitsky, "as it is not
based on any particular statistical model of the cell response and thus
does not involve any indirect assumptions."
In
the developed light source, a nonlinear optical crystal is irradiated
with light from an ultraviolet laser. Most photons pass directly through
the crystal, but approximately one in a million is split into two
visible-light photons having twice the wavelength (532 nanometers) of
the original photon (266 nanometers). One of these two photons is
detected by a photodiode and used to trigger an acousto-optical
modulator, causing it to divert the second photon to a tapered optical
fiber directed at a pipette containing a rod cell from a frog's eye (see
image). Any signal produced by the rod cell is then detected.
Racing
against the clock, since rod cells lose their viability after one to
two hours, the researchers measured ten rods cells taken from ten
different frogs. They found an average quantum efficiency of
approximately 30 per cent -- very close to that of human rod cells
estimated from behavioral experiments. Krivitsky notes that rod-cell
efficiency is comparable to the quantum efficiencies of state-of-the-art
human-made single-photon detectors such as photomultipliers (40 per
cent) and avalanche photodiodes (50 per cent); remarkably, rod cells
occupy an area of only 5 by 50 micrometers and contain their own power
supply.
The
new light source could be further used to investigate how the quantum
efficiency varies with wavelength, since it is easy to vary the
wavelength of the generated single photons.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by The Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR). Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- Nam Mai Phan, Mei Fun Cheng, Dmitri A. Bessarab, Leonid A. Krivitsky. Interaction of Fixed Number of Photons with Retinal Rod Cells. Physical Review Letters, 2014; 112 (21) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.213601
Cite This Page:
The
Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR). "The seeing power
of frogs: Frogs can detect single photons of light." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 20 January 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150120084545.htm>.
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