Optical Levitation, Space Travel, Quantum Mechanics and Gravity
An anonymous reader writes "Light doesn't just make things brighter; it can also push things around. Normally this "radiation pressure" force is so small you don't notice it. But if you get a really big mirror then you could use it to power a space ship to the stars. This is the idea behind solar sails. The impact of light is more obvious on small things. Scientists are thinking about levitation of a mirror that would be large enough to see with the naked eye. If this turns out to work, the motion of the floating mirror could be used to probe the physics that connects quantum theory and general relativity."
pushing things around like that. no more light-bullying!
We all know that light makes things heavy
From getting a big mirror (how big? how reflective? made of what? what prevents it from being pushed back itself?) to a "spaceship to the stars"...
Why does everything always have to be this quixotic "to the stars" nonsense?
Send what to the stars? Which star? For how long? You expect to be alive when it gets to the star?
There's nothing new about the idea of spacecraft being propelled by light pressure. There was an Arthur C. Clarke story published in "Boy's Life" in the early 60's about sunlight powered "sailing yachts" in a race from Earth orbit to the Moon. Or the Niven story "The Fourth Profession", in which an alien trading ship arrives at Earth, wanting humanity to build a launching laser to send the crew on the next leg of their journey.
And it's been 30 years since Niven & Pournelle published "Mote In God's Eye" in which an interstellar probe riding a the combined beam of battery of laser cannons arrive in human space.
So if actual human physicists are finally going to get around to proving the concept, so much the better!
There are two sorts of solar sail, those that work off photons (and, no, you don't need a mirror, since you can't afford the extra mass) and those that work off ionized particles being emitted from the sun. Ionized particles have much more momentum and are generally considered superior.
A solar sail that is 50 Km in diameter, attached to a 5 Kg probe, would accelerate that probe to 25% light speed by the time you reached the edge of the solar system.
If you built a car whose headlights could accelerate the car in reverse with photonic pressure, the headlights would vaporize a considerable chunk of the planet in front of you. You can do the calculation yourself. The equations are at http://www.physicsforums.com/s...
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Yes, light can generate is minuscule amount of push, but it also generates several times more heat.
From what I know, typically by the time you got enough light to push something, you would have generated enough heat to fry it several times over.
automatic transmission and transistor radio. Also X-ray, general relativity, computer and nuclear reactor. ACME, truck and road intersecting with rail tracks. Dynamite!, rocket engine and jet liner.
We could launch a 3D printer now and as it 3D printed a bigger and bigger sail we could build bigger and bigger solar arrays in space with the space elevator!
Golly gee, we really could get to the stars!
the interesting thing is you can force photons out of the way... effectively creating your own pressure gradient which provides accelleration in a direction of your choosing.
Optical computers, genetic catalogues, nano repair modules, forget all of that -
it's when you see a megaton of steel suspended over your head by a thread the thickness of a human hair, that you really find God in technology.
Anonymous Metagenics Dockworker, Morgan-link 3d-vision live interview.
That is great the levitation theory and radiation pressure using the concept of solar sails is being tested. But, even if this test prove to be a great success, There is no possibility that we will get to see Space Travel in our life times. Ironic Isnt it?
What about that team that managed to make light hand over more energy in the reflection "handshake" than it normally does?
The potential ideas for that hard light sound amazing if they could get it to work outside of a lab.
But space is pretty damn inert, so if you made something cool enough, it is easy to keep that temperature.
So if you were to do it there, could it be re-performed in space?
The only worry is there'd be so much light it would literally explode the damn ship. That is purely theoretical though.
Solar sails are powered by the solar wind, mainly hydrogen atoms, not photons. Light pressure is far too weak, AFIK, to move a space craft. Check your facts from sources that know what they're talking about. Bona fide researchers (not myself).
The summary (and the headline) unnecessarily highlights space travel as a usage for radiation pressure and delegates the most interesting part as a footnote-ish last line. The /. crowd as usual starts shouting pros and cons of space travel, as if every comment on this page is not saying what has already been said a million time around here, and nobody to talk about the interesting part.
I wish someone with the right background in physics posted something more interesting about the fact that a group of researchers have come up with prediction of how a non-quantized spacetime (gravity) would look in the presence of quantized matter/energy. Apparently this would look different than a quantized background with quantized foreground (IANAP, so I don't know what is this all about) in a measurable way. If they can levitate a tiny but macroscopic mirror using light and balance it then giving it a gentle push would create a pendulum with no friction slowing it down. By probing the frequency evolution one can potentially get closer to actually knowing whether a quantum theory of gravity is the right way to unify QM and GR.
It's fascinating that such things are possible even in principle with existing technology. I wish someone would explain something more related to this.
So it's light smashing into matter and imparting its energy onto it so that it moves. What's quantum about that? That's only Newton level physics.
I imagine you would have more than 7 years bad luck for breaking this mirror!