To capture the faint signals from
sodium atoms close to Io, the observers had to find a way to cope with the bright sunlight reflected from Io's surface, as well as from the even stronger light from nearby Jupiter.
Not exact matches
The researchers moved these tweezers
closer together until the laser beams overlapped, allowing the
sodium and cesium
atoms to collide.
Sodium atoms were evaporatively cooled
close to the onset of Bose - Einstein condensation and then suddenly quenched to below the transition temperature.