"Time Telescope" Could Boost Fibre-Optic Communications
An anonymous reader writes "A time lens can focus a chunk of time to a point, rather like a normal lens focuses light rays. Put two time lenses together and you can create what a Cornell University team calls a 'time domain telescope' which can magnify time. They sent a 2.5 nanosecond long light pulse, encoding 24 bits of information, into their time telescope. What came out on the other side was the same 24 bit pulse, but compressed into 92 picoseconds. Squashing more information into a light pulse could help to send more information via optical fibres."
"A time lens can focus a chunk of time to a point, rather like a normal lens focuses light rays."
no, its not LIKE a normal lens, it IS a normal lens. kind of like how "cloud computing" is the same client/ server model of decades past, a "times lens" is basically, uh, gee, a lens. but made sexy by introducing scifi fantasy terminology for the sake of grabbing attention
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Doesn't that mean they compressed the amount of time it took light to travel that distance, and therefore changed the speed of light? Or was this simply a compression of the distance between the photons?
Neither. They've created a frequency upshifter (possibly one with interesting spectral properties to preserve the integrity of the encoded information, although the New Sensationalist article is so completely incoherent it's impossible to say if they have actually achieved that result) and given it the most dishonest, misleading name possible to confuse people, as posters above have noted, to grab attention.
They've got attention, but they haven't conveyed any information.
Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
So, a normal lens will compress a series of pulses into a shorter series? How, exactly? I didn't realize that normal lenses worked by exciting the atoms in a waveguide with an infrared laser.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
...and he got modded up. "News for Nerds" used to mean the kind of nerds that were like Lisa Simpson and Martin Prince. Now the typical Slashdot nerd is more likely to be the Milhouse van Houten kind of nerd.
The other issue which nobody seems to be bringing up is that at the other end the light has to be uncompressed and corrected for errors so that it can be read properly. This takes time and essentially negates any savings. I suppose this sort of thing would be useful if vast distances were involved, but on the Earth, the distances are short enough where it's really a neat science trick rather than anything useful.