# Can electromagnetic fields be used to deconstruct and reconstruct atoms?

I was thinking one day and came up with a theory after reading about how scientists were studying anti-matter by using electro magnetic fields to separate matter from the anti-matter they made. It got me thinking would it be possible to use very powerful electromagnetic fields to break down the atomic structure of objects or build things in this way?

Is this atomic reconstruction with electromagnetic fields theoretically possible? That is, is it theoretically possible to use electromagnetic fields generated by a machine to separate the parts of an atom thereby deconstructing an object on the atomic/subatomic level?

I'm not asking about breaking molecular bonds but rather actual atoms apart. If it's possible to break atoms apart with electromagnetic fields, is it also possible to use a similar process to assemble them?

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Josh, have your studies come to the fact that atoms are composed out of a nucleus which is composed by protons and neutrons bound together by the strong force and electrons on the outside ? You deconstruct atoms , making them ions every time you rub the cat. If you mean deconstructing nuclei, magnetic fields are not strong enough to break the binding of the strong force. –  anna v Nov 12 '12 at 9:35
What you seem to be thinking is some kind of atom-level 3D printer –  lurscher Dec 2 '12 at 17:48
What do you mean by breaking atoms apart? Do you only want to strip electrons or do you also want to tear the nucleus apart? –  Brandon Enright May 1 at 23:12

It is doable, easily, if you consider time-dependent EM fields - or, more specifically, pulses of light. This is because light can be focused into a tight focal spot of ~ wavelength size, thus squeezing a lot of energy (and thus EM field) into a tight spot. This is impossible using static fields, which can't reach maxima except at their sources. Just as importantly, one can prepare really short pulses of radiation that compress into a short (i.e. few femtoseconds) time the energy stored in a laser medium over a millisecond or so. This allows quite modest energies - of millijoule order - to create electric fields comparable with the atomic electric fields (as in John Rennie's answer) for long enough to ionize just about any atom.

Note that this does not need a macroscopic sample (although actually observing stuff usually does!). If you manage by some means to get a single atom to sit still at a known position (which is a doable but nontrivial exercise) then firing enough strong laser pulses will ionize it, releasing one electron. You can of course release more electrons but it will naturally get harder and harder (so that triple ionization is the most you can hope for). Photon energies (which are proportional to the frequency) are not really a concern in this high-intensity regime, where multiphoton ionization and tunnel ionization take over as the main mechanisms as one goes from optical to IR and lower frequencies.

Regarding the converse in your question, we have nothing like the technology to "atomically print" a table, atom by atom, and I would question the feasibility of such a scheme. Optical tweezers, for example, can be used to move molecules around and depositing them on a surface could potentially work, but their spatial resolution is limited (by the wavelength, which can't be too short or stuff starts to break). Even worse, you'd have to work at it for something like geological-scale times to get anything sizable.

On the other hand, metamaterials are a good example where we can build materials to atomic-scale detail so that they have the macroscopic properties we want, including such exotica as negative refraction indices or strongly chiral media. While it does not exactly fit the bill you ask for, I think it is fundamentally more cool with the added bonus of being feasible.

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Consider an isolated hydrogen atom. The binding energy of the proton and electron is 13.6eV and the average separation is about 0.05nm. So to tear the electron and proton apart you need a field gradient of about 13.6V per 0.05nm. Converting this to more sensible units gives about 2.7 $\times$ 10$^{11}$ volts/metre, and this is far above what we can create in the lab.
@John Rennie Hi John, the scale of the electric field strength for ionizing one single hydrogen atom is not that impossible, according to my materials. If we take the electric-field of a laser into account, then the $2.7\times10^{11}$V/m(or $2.7\times10^{9}$V/cm) corresponds to an intensity of approximately $1.9\times10^{16}$W/cm^2. A paper from Optical Society of America named 'Relativistic Optics' said a record intensity of $10^{21}$ W/cm^2 has been demonstrated in University of Michigan, and that was in 2004. –  spherical chicken Dec 2 '12 at 17:16