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Light Stopped, Held And Re-emitted By A Crystal

nherc writes: "An article in Nature talks about an incredible new crystal that can actual stop and hold light to be later emitted. It's mentioned light has previously been "slowed" by super cooled gases, but this certainly blows that away. They mention this could be a major step towards quantum computing."

14 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. constant speed of light by totallygeek · · Score: 5, Funny
    E=0?


    No, really, I know light speed changes. c is just for light in a vacuum... This is really neat stuff, and I hope this becomes a leap forward in understanding quantum mechanics.

  2. The Crystal of Earendil? by Colin+Winters · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is this basically what the crystal Galadriel gives to Frodo does? Stores light, until it's needed in his "darkest hour?" If it is, it means that those damn elves are still decades ahead of us in technology! We must find them, take their tech, and destroy them!

    Colin Winters
    ...who thinks Galadriel is hot...

  3. The reason it's old news by ch-chuck · · Score: 5, Funny

    is that they've not only stopped light, but made it go backwards, reversing time, so this 'discovery' got projected into the future, where we're reading about it now as if it were new, altho it's been done some time ago.

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  4. Is it just me... by TheFrood · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...or does the picture at the start of the article make everyone else think of "Missile Command"?

    TheFrood

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  5. This page . . . by OverlordQ · · Score: 5, Informative


    helps to explain how they're achieving this with a graphic representation. Still a little technical for me, but it kinda makes sense.

    --
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  6. Re:Magical Crystal = Glow In The Dark Stuff? by br0ck · · Score: 5, Informative

    how can this possibly relate to quantum computing?

    From http://www.sciam.com/2001/0701issue/0701hau.html

    "Another application for slow and stopped light could be quantum computers, in which the usual definite 1's and 0's are replaced with quantum superpositions of 1's and 0's called qubits. Such computers, if they can be built, would be able to solve certain problems that would take an ordinary computer an enormously long time. Two broad categories of qubits exist: those that stay in one place and interact with one another readily (such as quantum states of atoms) and those that travel rapidly from place to place (photons) but are difficult to make interact in the ways needed in a quantum computer. The slow-light system, by transforming flying photons into stationary dark state patterns and back, provides a robust way to convert between these types of qubits, a process that could be essential for building large-scale quantum computers. We can imagine imprinting two pulses in the same atom cloud, allowing the atoms to interact, and then reading out the result by generating new output light pulses."

  7. Re:Magical Crystal = Glow In The Dark Stuff? by GreyPoopon · · Score: 4, Informative
    But, this sounds like it actually holds the photons and releases them later. Or at least that's what the submission infers.

    Based on the article, it appears more like the complete energy from the photons is absorbed by the atoms. The photons can then be emitted later by changing the intensity of the laser that is causing the atoms to hold onto it. I don't see this as really trapping light. It looks more to me like the energy from the "holding laser" plus the energy from the photons manages to push the electrons to a higher valence level and leave them there, even when the incoming photon supply is turned off. Then I would suspect that lowering the intensity of the holding laser would allow the electrons to drop to a less excited state and thus release the energy in the form of photons. It really sounds just like a fluorescent light except that you now have control over when the photons are actually generated by the excited atoms.

    Feel free to correct me vigorously. I haven't thought about this kind of stuff in earnest for more than 15 years.

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    GreyPoopon
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  8. Light speed doesn't change by UberQwerty · · Score: 5, Informative

    Only average lightspeed changes. The speed of light (photons - same speed as all massless particles) is always c (about 300kk in m/s). However, the light can be delayed. When a photon hits an atom, it usually transfers its energy to an electron, which jumps to a higher orbital. The electron then nearly instantly drops down to its old orbital and gives off the energy in the form of (guess what) a photon. A constant rate of interception and expulsion by atoms can cause the average speed of the light to be slowed, but the photon is always moving at c. The crystal/laser combination mentioned in the article just keeps the energy from the light a LOT longer than the picoseconds it spends in electrons normally

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  9. War with the Elves? Suicide! by ColGraff · · Score: 5, Funny

    Vietnam aside, I really don't like the chances of any army against one with significantly superior technology - and the US army is heavily trained to rely on the superiority of its tech.

    Futhermore, the peaceniks would have a field day with this - I doubt the Elf War would be very popular on the home front. It would take a really strong president to overcome this...

    Vote Sauron in 2004!
    (This post was a paid message from the Committe to Elect Sauron, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to America's future as the stronghold of the Dark Lord.)

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  10. Holographic Buffer by Vortran · · Score: 5, Informative

    You guys don't get this, do you? It is not a "light capacitor" or a new twist on "glowies". What has been done here is to use subatomic particles to store information about coherent light signals.

    Perhaps some of the enlightened /. geeks remember stirrings that show up from time to time in cyberspace regarding holographic 3D memory. The premise is that, using holographic media, it is theoretically possible to store massive (a terabye in 10 sq. cm) amounts of data in an extraordinarily small space without electron lag which is a problem in high-speed microelectronics.

    In optoelectronic computing systems and quantum computing systems the ability to store photons and photon signals is tantamount to the realization of full scale optoectronic (and quantum-based) computing.

    I digress. This is awesome and I am very enthusiastic. Once again, it doesn't stop light, bend time, slow light, warp space or anything else like it. And it doesn't glow in the dark. It's like a single-channel holographic buffer and it is absolutely wonderful!

    Vortan out

    --
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  11. Light goes at c by epepke · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A lot of people have been saying that light only goes at c in a vacuum. This isn't quite right.

    Light goes always at c, period. When it goes through a solid, a better metaphor is that it has to slalom around the atoms in the solid. Of course due to QM it's really more like that Charles Addams cartoon with a ski track leading up to a tree, splitting around, and continuing on. At this point, classical approximations stop making sense, and you have to start talking about amplitudes. You can get the Feynman New Zealand videotapes here. It's an excellent but basic and easily understandable introduction to quantum electrodynamics.

    In any event, this doesn't seem to be the same mechanism (unless the amplitudes get stuck as if the photon were going in a loop). It appears to be a similar mechanism, as pointed out elsewhere, to glow-in-the-dark paint. Terribly exciting, but not foundation-shattering, unfortunately. It would be a lot of fun if it were.

    Another minor wrinkle is that c is very slightly faster than the speed of light in a vacuum, because a vacuum isn't quite empty. Particles come into the vacuum and immediately annihilated each other all the time. You can theoretically get rid of these by putting a vacuum between two plates so close together that these virtual particles can't form.

  12. Re:Which version of the Pentium by pogofish · · Score: 5, Funny

    AMD has a quantum CPU almost ready for production. Unfortunately, their trials show that when your cooling fan fails the probability wave collapses and your cat dies.

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    A man without a God is like a fish without a bicycle.
  13. Amazing New Material by istartedi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Amazing New Material! Stores Light!!!

    Buy our amazing new Oak Light Trees (TM) today. So attractive, so easy to use. Just follow these simple instructions:

    1. Put Oak Light Trees (TM) in ground.

    2. In most climates, do nothing for 5-100 years or more depending on how much light you need and when. In some climates, you may need to water the ground in the viscinity of the Oak Light Tree (TM).

    3. Cut the base of the Oak Light Tree (TM) with a chain saw or axe, or simply have someone knock it over with a bulldozer, then cut into smaller pieces.

    4. Allow to dry for 1 year.

    5. Light the smaller units of the Oak Light Tree (TM) with a match or lighter until they begin to emit light on their own. Add larger and larger pieces until the light is satisfying.

    Amazing!!! And not only do they provide light, but heat as well. Buy today. Only $20/piece.

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  14. Re:Is this anything like "Slow glass"? by michael_cain · · Score: 5, Funny

    When I first read a story with "slow glass" in it, I thought "That might be cool." Then I thought about how much energy was somehow stored internally if I left a sheet lying in the desert in direct sunlight for ten years. Then I thought about what would happen if all that energy were discharged at once when the crystal structure (or whatever) was damaged by, say, the neighborhood brat throwing a brick through it. And decided that I wouldn't want any of that stuff in my house!