(http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/) 
 
 
 
Pushing Light Beyond Light  Speed
by Kate McAlpine on 11 August 2011, 5:01 PM 

 
 
(http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/assets_c/2011/08/sn-lightspeed-thumb-800xauto-10728.jpg)
 

 
 
Speedy. Without special materials, the peak of a  pulse stays at the same 
location in the pulse, but fast light materials can  shift the peak forward, 
making it appear to travel faster than light  speed.
Credit: Adapted from D. J. Gauthier and R. W.  Boyd, Photonics Spectra, 41 
(January 2007)

 
Warp speed is still out of reach for spaceships, but two new experiments 
have  pushed a pulse of light beyond the speed limit of 300,000 kilometers per 
second  set down in Einstein's theory of special relativity. Although 
physicists had  pulled off similar feats before, two teams now report ways to 
beat down the loss  of light so that much more of it appears to break the 
universal speed limit.  Don't worry, the tricky experiments don't really 
violate 
relativity. But the  techniques might, in principle, slightly speed up 
optical communications. 
Here's how you make a pulse of light appear to travel faster than light  
speed. The pulse can be thought of as a kind of rogue wave of electromagnetic  
radiation zipping through space so that if you made a graph of the pulse's  
intensity, it would start at zero, smoothly climb to a single peak, and 
then  decline back toward zero. But such a peak can also be thought of as a 
collection  of waves with a range of wavelengths, all continuously oscillating 
up and down  and piled on top of one another. At the center of the pulse, 
the various waves  all line up and reinforce each other (see figure). In 
contrast, near the leading  and trailing edges of the pulse, the different 
waves 
get out of sync and cancel  one another out. 
Now suppose you run the light pulse through a special material that slows  
down some wavelengths of light more than others. That can change the way the 
 waves line up and, ironically, shift the spot at which the various waves  
reinforce each other forward, making the peak appear to jump forward faster 
than  light. The peak can even appear to emerge from the back of the 
material before  it enters the front. None of this violates relativity, 
however, as 
that would  require the individual waves to run faster than light speed. 
More generally,  physicists now interpret relativity to mean that information 
cannot be  transmitted faster than light. And it's the unvarying speed of 
the first  overlapping light waves, not the exact position of the pulse's 
peak, that  determines the ultimate rate at which information can flow. 
Vitaliy Lomakin of the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues 
at  the Public University of Navarre in Pamplona, Spain, put this idea into 
practice  by sending microwaves into a 35-micrometer-thick, holey sheet of 
copper  sandwiched between two 0.79-millimeter-thick Teflon discs. As a 
consequence of  this design, the peak of a microwave pulse can emerge from the 
other side of the  device even before it enters the metal sandwich. 
But the metal doesn't naturally let much light through. That's where the  
Teflon comes in. The two layers maintain the brightness and direction of the  
waves while the metal's pattern of holes builds up the signal in these 
strong  waves. Whereas previous experiments might have seen less than 1% of the 
light  pulse break the cosmic speed limit, _the  interaction between the 
metal and Teflon allowed the team to send 10% through  about 100 picoseconds 
early_ 
(http://prb.aps.org/accepted/B/46072Y96K7419c2a44bd9606b9b8b01602e033d01?ajax=1&&;)
 , an advance soon to be described in Physical  Review B. "This 
is achieved with a remarkably thin structure that can be  fabricated easily 
in a wide spectrum from microwaves to visible light," Lomakin  says. 
Li Zhan and colleagues at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China say they  
could make a pulse arrive even earlier with optical fibers, which are 
already  used for high-speed data communications. This team sent an infrared 
light 
signal  clockwise through a loop of optical fiber and measured it at two 
sensors, one  near the point where the light entered the fiber and the other 
10 meters on.  Ordinarily, the signal passing through the silicon fiber would 
show up in the  first sensor and then reach the second sensor 48.6 
nanoseconds later. However,  Zhan and his colleagues managed to speed the 
signal up 
so much that it arrived  at the second sensor 221.2 nanoseconds before it 
reached the first one.  
In this experiment, the optical fiber itself played a role similar to that 
of  the holey plate. To speed up the light signal, a second light wave ran  
counterclockwise through the optical fiber. The presence of that additional  
light changed the speed at which light waves of different wavelength zip 
along  to modify the alignment of the waves. Typically, this second wave 
absorbs so  much of the signal light that pushing the peak ahead even 1 
nanosecond reduces  the peak's intensity by about 20%. By contrast, _the  
researchers 
managed to push the light forward by 211.3 nanoseconds before losing  that 
much light_ 
(http://www.physics.sjtu.edu.cn/laserlab/sites/www.physics.sjtu.edu.cn.laserlab/files/NEGATIVE%20GROUP%20VELOCITY%20SUPERLUMINAL%20PROPAGATIO
N%20IN%20OPTICAL%20FIBERS%20USING%20STIMULATED%20BRILLOUIN%20SCATTERING.pdf)
 , they report in a paper in press at Physical Review  Letters.  
Although information can't really travel faster than light speed, Zhan 
argues  that communications could make small gains in the speed at which 
signals 
are  detected. The receivers in optical communication systems also react to 
the peak  of a pulse, not its leading edge. Pushing the peak closer to that 
edge might  save only a few hundred nanoseconds, but Zhan says it could one 
day make the  difference in the whirlwind world of high-speed stock 
exchange. 
"This may be true, but they have not done the experiment," says Daniel  
Gauthier, a specialist in fast light at Duke University in Durham, North  
Carolina. Based on his research and that of others, he expects the pulse's  
information-carrying shape will be mangled in the process. Günter Nimtz, an  
expert in faster-than-light-speed phenomena at the University of Cologne in  
Germany, agrees that changes to the pulse shape would be problematic, but he  
suggests that with some knowledge about the wavelengths in the pulse, and the 
 material it moves through, the receiving end could recover the  
information.




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