We Never Know
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Hmmm. Not a subject I excel in but what I understand it's very interesting.
Researchers develop way to control speed of light, send it backward
Researchers develop way to control speed of light, send it backward
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I've used a mirror to send light backwards.
The only problem is that there's always some hideous threatening guy in it.
We fight until the mirror breaks.
I know!You have to fight him to show him who's boss. Every time you look at him he's always eyeballing you.
Hmmm. Not a subject I excel in but what I understand it's very interesting.
Researchers develop way to control speed of light, send it backward
Hmmm. Not a subject I excel in but what I understand it's very interesting.
Researchers develop way to control speed of light, send it backward
Scientists have been able to slow light DOWN for awhile now; pass it through various things...as for sending it backwards, I think a poster just mentioned that all you need to do that is a mirror.
It's the 'speeding light up to 30 times the 'speed of light'" that has me flurmuggled. If 'they' can speed anything up past the 'speed of light,' even light itself, then, er, doesn't that throw a huge monkey wrench into things?
I thought that nothing went faster than the established speed of light? (except, of course, the universe itself, eventually, but that might be an interesting problem to deal with--)
I'm astrophysically challenged. Just consider this, if anybody is actually knowledgeable about this stuff, a stupid question that the asker really would like answered.
Did you read the link? From the link.
"Previous attempts at controlling the speed of light have included passing light through various materials to adjust its speed. The new technique, however, allows the speed to be adjusted for the first time in the open, without using any pass-through material to speed it up or slow it down.
"This is the first clear demonstration of controlling the speed of a pulse light in free space,"
yes. I read the link. That's where I found the basis for my question regarding the ability to speed light up 30 times. Do you have the answer to that question?
Reflecting light is no more sending light backwards than bouncing a ball on the on the ground sends the ball in reverse.I think a poster just mentioned that all you need to do that is a mirror.
Nope. As I stated I'm not real knowledgeable on the subject. But I can help you with something, light into a mirror isn't reversing light, it's reflecting light.
Reflecting light is no more sending light backwards than bouncing a ball on the on the ground sends the ball in reverse.
I meant actually going in reverse rather than a change in trajectory.Unless you are trying to tell me that the ball that one bounces on the ground isn't the same ball that one caught in the first place? I mean, really....if one can deflect, or send, the ball one catches to the ground, then it is also possible to return it to it's precise origin, yes? You know, 'backward?'
I meant actually going in reverse rather than a change in trajectory.
No. The path is being redirected. The light going in reverse has been described as "negative speed," and it goes backwards without an object reflecting it/changing the trajectory, as is the case with a ball or light reflecting off a mirror.When light reaches a reflective surface and bounces back along the path it took to get there, it's 'going back,' isn't it?
No. The path is being redirected. The light going in reverse has been described as "negative speed," and it goes backwards without an object reflecting it/changing the trajectory, as is the case with a ball or light reflecting off a mirror.