Those interested in optics and physics may find this of interest:

Source: PhysOrg.Com - Tilburg, The Netherlands

http://www.physorg.com/news66582110.html

May 11, 2006


Light's Most Exotic Trick Yet: So Fast It Goes... Backwards?
by Jonathan Sherwood
University of Rochester, New York

In the past few years, scientists have found ways to make light
go both faster and slower than its usual speed limit, but now
researchers at the University of Rochester have published a
paper today in Science on how they've gone one step further:
pushing light into reverse. As if to defy common sense, the
backward-moving pulse of light travels faster than light.
Confused? You're not alone.

"I've had some of the world's experts scratching their heads
over this one," says Robert Boyd, the M. Parker Givens Professor
of Optics at the University of Rochester. "Theory predicted that
we could send light backwards, but nobody knew if the theory
would hold up or even if it could be observed in laboratory
conditions."

Boyd recently showed how he can slow down a pulse of light to
slower than an airplane, or speed it up faster than its
breakneck pace, using exotic techniques and materials. But he's
now taken what was once just a mathematical oddity—negative
speed—and shown it working in the real world.

"It's weird stuff," says Boyd. "We sent a pulse through an
optical fiber, and before its peak even entered the fiber, it
was exiting the other end. Through experiments we were able to
see that the pulse inside the fiber was actually moving
backward, linking the input and output pulses."

So, wouldn't Einstein shake a finger at all these strange
goings-on? After all, this seems to violate Einstein's sacred
tenet that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.

"Einstein said information can't travel faster than light, and
in this case, as with all fast-light experiments, no information
is truly moving faster than light," says Boyd. "The pulse of
light is shaped like a hump with a peak and long leading and
trailing edges. The leading edge carries with it all the
information about the pulse and enters the fiber first. By the
time the peak enters the fiber, the leading edge is already well
ahead, exiting. From the information in that leading edge, the
fiber essentially 'reconstructs' the pulse at the far end,
sending one version out the fiber, and another backward toward
the beginning of the fiber."

Boyd is already working on ways to see what will happen if he
can design a pulse without a leading edge. Einstein says the
entire faster-than-light and reverse-light phenomena will
disappear. Boyd is eager to put Einstein to the test.

So How Does Light Go Backwards?

Boyd, along with Rochester graduate students George M. Gehring
and Aaron Schweinsberg, and undergraduates Christopher Barsi of
Manhattan College and Natalie Kostinski of the University of
Michigan, sent a burst of laser light through an optical fiber
that had been laced with the element erbium. As the pulse exited
the laser, it was split into two. One pulse went into the erbium
fiber and the second traveled along undisturbed as a reference.
The peak of the pulse emerged from the other end of the fiber
before the peak entered the front of the fiber, and well ahead
of the peak of the reference pulse.

But to find out if the pulse was truly traveling backward within
the fiber, Boyd and his students had to cut back the fiber every
few inches and re-measure the pulse peaks when they exited each
pared-back section of the fiber. By arranging that data and
playing it back in a time sequence, Boyd was able to depict, for
the first time, that the pulse of light was moving backward
within the fiber.

To understand how light's speed can be manipulated, think of a
funhouse mirror that makes you look fatter. As you first walk by
the mirror, you look normal, but as you pass the curved portion
in the center, your reflection stretches, with the far edge
seeming to leap ahead of you (the reference walker) for a
moment. In the same way, a pulse of light fired through special
materials moves at normal speed until it hits the substance,
where it is stretched out to reach and exit the material's other
side [See "fast light" animation].

Conversely, if the funhouse mirror were the kind that made you
look skinny, your reflection would appear to suddenly squish
together, with the leading edge of your reflection slowing as
you passed the curved section. Similarly, a light pulse can be
made to contract and slow inside a material, exiting the other
side much later than it naturally would [See "slow light"
animation].

To visualize Boyd's reverse-traveling light pulse, replace the
mirror with a big-screen TV and video camera. As you may have
noticed when passing such a display in an electronics store
window, as you walk past the camera, your on-screen image
appears on the far side of the TV. It walks toward you, passes
you in the middle, and continues moving in the opposite
direction until it exits the other side of the screen.

A negative-speed pulse of light acts much the same way. As the
pulse enters the material, a second pulse appears on the far end
of the fiber and flows backward. The reversed pulse not only
propagates backward, but it releases a forward pulse out the far
end of the fiber. In this way, the pulse that enters the front
of the fiber appears out the end almost instantly, apparently
traveling faster than the regular speed of light. To use the TV
analogy again—it's as if you walked by the shop window, saw your
image stepping toward you from the opposite edge of the TV
screen, and that TV image of you created a clone at that far
edge, walking in the same direction as you, several paces ahead
[See "backward light" animation].

"I know this all sounds weird, but this is the way the world
works," says Boyd.

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