Robert B. Laughlin (born November 1, 1950, Visalia, California, U.S.) is an American physicist who, with Daniel C. Tsui and Horst Störmer, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1998 for the discovery that electrons in an extremely powerful magnetic field can form a quantum fluid in which “portions” of electrons can be identified. This effect is known as the fractional quantum Hall effect.
Laughlin graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1972 and earned a Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1979. He conducted research at Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey (1979–81) and at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California (1981–82), before becoming an associate professor of physics at Stanford University (Stanford, California) in 1985. He became a full professor at Stanford in 1989.
Laughlin received his share of the Nobel Prize for explaining the puzzling experimental results obtained by Tsui and Störmer in 1982 in the course of their research at Bell Laboratories. The two men had been experimenting with the Hall effect—the voltage that develops between the edges of a thin current-carrying ribbon placed flat between the poles of a strong magnet. The Hall effect had been known since 1879, but in 1980 the German physicist Klaus von Klitzing, while observing the effect at very low temperatures and under extremely strong magnetic fields, discovered that as the strength of the applied magnetic field is increased, the corresponding change in the voltage of the deflected current (the Hall resistance) occurs in a series of steps or jumps that are proportional to integer numbers, thereby displaying quantum properties. Tsui and Störmer extended Klitzing’s work by observing the Hall effect at temperatures near absolute zero and under even more powerful magnetic fields. Under these conditions, the voltage of the deflected current changed in fractional increments of the steps observed by Klitzing, suggesting that the charge carriers in the current carry exact fractions of an electron’s charge.
Laughlin provided the theoretical explanation for these puzzling results in 1983. He posited that the extremely low temperature and the tremendous magnetic field induce the electrons in an electric current to condense and form a “quantum fluid” that is related to those which occur in superconducting materials and in liquid helium. The fluid is formed when electrons combine with the “flux quanta” of the magnetic field to form new quasi-particles, each of which carries only one-third of an electron’s charge. This phenomenon is an unusual extension of quantum physics that may shed additional light on the nature and structure of matter.