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Harvard Physicists Make Light Dance

tetrikphimvin and others clued us to the latest work by Harvard's Lene Vestergaard Hau, being published today in the journal Nature. The NYTimes has a good layman's overview of how Hau's team encoded a light beam in a clump of atoms and later reconstituted it elsewhere. The Harvard Gazette offers additional details, a photo, and video links.

8 of 109 comments (clear)

  1. One Bad Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Harvard Physicists Make Light Dance
    Then they slowly loaded their six shooters while chewing on a half burnt cigar and make it dance again. They then told light to leave town or it would be pushing up roses. The Harvard townspeople danced joyously and there was much rejoicing.
  2. DDR Lights... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Stop playing Dance Dance Revolution and get back to work! There's nothing in the research contract about getting physical on the job!

  3. Meanwhile by roguegramma · · Score: 5, Funny

    Meanwhile, in Russia, light makes physicists dance.

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    Hey don't blame me, IANAB
  4. Re:So, if you walk next to stopped light... by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Relativity is concerned with the speed of light in a vacuum. Anytime light passes through a substance it is slowed down. It's not much different than walking past a cup of water.

  5. Re:acid by spun · · Score: 4, Informative

    Acid is for wimps. If you really want to see light dance, you want N,N-DMT or 5MeO-DMT. There is also no way to stop it from utterly demolishing your ego, so ego based people should NOT try it.

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    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  6. Re:So, if you walk next to stopped light... by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 5, Funny
    If you say "IANAP" in your post it gives you a license to say whatever you like about physics. Here's an example:

    IANAP but I think that when virtual particles interact in a magnetic field then in the frame of reference of a photon the wavefunction collapse allows faster than light communication except when in violation of the second law of thermodynamics.

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    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  7. Frame of reference by DAtkins · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hee hee... that's funny, despite the fact that it's wrong.

    Frame of reference is an idea that actually had it's beginnings in Einstein's work. The idea being, can a person determine the absolute velocity of [something]. For example, from the frame of reference of the earth, my car goes 65 miles per hour. From the frame of reference of the sun, my car goes 2.9 km/s (because the earth moves that fast around the sun.

    Why is this important? Well, Einstein used this to question why the speed of light seemed constant despite your frame of reference. On a ball of rock orbiting the sun at 2.9 km/s, the speed of light is c. On the surface of the sun (which has no orbital velocity in comparison to the earth), the speed of light is still c. From the frame of reference of the center of the galaxy (where the sun has extremely high relative velocity - which I'm too lazy to look up) the speed of light is still c.

    Which means that, either the speed of light somehow knows how fast you are going and adjusts itself (which is, of course, retarded) or there is something about spacetime that makes it seem that way. Hence the general theory of relativity was developed to explain it. (Which, in case you are curious, states that the ruler that you are using lenghtens or shortens depending on your "frame of reference")

    So, it's actually quite important.

  8. Re:relativity by TexVex · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If I understand correctly, light travels more slowly through translucent substances because the photons are being absorbed and re-emitted by the electrons in them. The photons travel at c until they hit an atom's electron shell. The electron absorbs the photon, quantum leaps to a higher energy state, then immediately releases the absorbed energy as another photon and returns to its rest state. That whole process takes time, effectively slowing down a pulse of light. The light is still travelling at c between atoms.

    In the experiment being discussed in the article, it sounds like they are stopping the process at the point where the photons have been absorbed by matter, and delaying their being re-emitted for quite a long time (relatively speaking). The light is being stopped, but not by causing photons to travel more slowly than c. It's being stopped by keeping the photons' energy bottled up inside the Bose-Einstein condensate.

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