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Space-Time Cloak Could Hide Actual Events

An anonymous reader writes "My first thought was, a hypothetical space-time invisibility cloak? That must be what hypothetical crime-fighting Einstein wears when he wades into the fray! Sadly, the researchers who thought up this trick to 'hide events' say that the metamaterials we have on hand will only allow for a nanoscale demonstration at best."

7 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Minkowski you bastard by Adambomb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    mwahaha! if i'm never a part of events intersecting the light cone i dont exist!

    oh shiii-

    --
    Ice Cream has no bones.
    1. Re:Minkowski you bastard by Pawnn · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're making never leaving the house sound wayyy too scientific!

  2. Re: post by JustOK · · Score: 4, Funny

    all fine until the spacetime moderators show up.

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
  3. Better article by ath1901 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I found another article about the article which makes more sense: http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/44320

    There is a chicken and car analogy that should appeal to the crowd here:

    An analogy, says McCall, is a chicken crossing a busy road. Once the chicken steps onto the road cars must stop to let it pass, but as soon as it leaves the other side the cars would accelerate to catch up with the traffic ahead. To an observer farther down the road, the stream of passing cars would display no evidence of having slowed down.

    So, there is no magical disappearing of time or events or 4D cloaking of spacetime. That's just bullshit from some journalist who doesn't understand what spacetime or 4D means... Not more than a recorded tv program is cloaking space time.

    1. Re:Better article by ath1901 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ok, so here's my personal rant:
      Why are all the non-linear optics experiments ALWAYS misinterpreted as having something to do with spacetime or relativity?

      A optical black hole is NOT a black hole. It's a piece of glass. Radiation from such an optical black hole is NOT Hawking radiation . It just happens to have the same explanation.

      Just because light in a vacuum "happens" to travel at the fastest possible speed ("the speed of light" = c) doesn't mean that when light is slowed down, the maximum speed is somehow slowed down. Spacetime is completely unaffected by the bending/stretching/slowing down of light. You CAN travel faster than the speed of light in a piece of glass but you CAN NOT travel faster than the theoretical speed limit known as "the speed of light" / c.

      Light isn't special. It is just another particle (photons). It doesn't affect spacetime in any way except by the gravitational force which happens to be tiny since it is so light (pun not intended).

  4. Re:Hiding things? Isn't that the point of invisibl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought a safe cracker was one without tuna.

  5. Re:Wasn't this an episode of Star Trek? by uglyduckling · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ahhh! So you spotted that massive plot hole in the Harry Potter films too ;).