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Old 12-11-2008, 02:40 PM
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Slow Light????

Slow light.. is not C constant some sort of rule that can not be broken one is at first prompted to ask...


However the researchers point out.......

Slowing light this way doesn't violate any principle of physics. Einstein's theory of relativity places an upper, but not lower, limit on the speed of light.





http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/news/8...speed-internet

I thought this may be interesting

alex

Last edited by xelasnave; 12-11-2008 at 03:09 PM.
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Old 12-11-2008, 03:03 PM
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From Harvard U so it must be good....

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/....18/light.html

alex
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Old 12-11-2008, 03:23 PM
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At the end of the HU gaz.....
..... (things)...are already being set up to slow light speed even more, to one centimeter (less than a half-inch) a second. That's a leisurely 120 feet an hour.

They said it not me

alex
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Old 17-11-2008, 08:51 PM
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I seem to remember recently where scientists have actually stopped photons for a fraction of a second. can't remember the source though.

Bill
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Old 17-11-2008, 09:46 PM
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Light speed dependant on the media it travels through

The speed of light 299,792.458 km/sec is in a vacuum. Light slows down when it travels through different media. For example light slows when travelling through glass. Were it no so, then refractor telescopes and eye glasses would be impossible. The speed of light is relative to the refractive index of the material. For example the refractive index of light in diamond (the slowing down) is responsible for the nice colours and hence the price of this form of carbon. Your best bet is to check out some 1st years physics books as they nicely illustrate refractive indexes and light speed changes in assorted media
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Old 17-11-2008, 10:32 PM
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Thank you Peter for the input.
I felt the research takes the matter a little beyond refraction as covered at the basic level of 1st year physics ....which was the reason I posted in fact.
alex
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Old 17-11-2008, 10:45 PM
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I think light slows in glass by approx 33% (light slows to approx 66% of speed in a vacuum in glass...) yet in the research program they are slowing it to 16% of its speed in a vacuum. That is a dramatic difference to what we have listed in the refractive index...

alex
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Old 18-11-2008, 07:57 PM
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The slowing I think you are refering to is related to low temperature plasma physics and quantum mechanics. Articles have appeared in New Scientist and similiar publications. I wasn't being demeaning when I suggested the 1st year physics book in relation to the refractive index. If you have taken offense, I appologise unreservedly.
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Old 18-11-2008, 08:07 PM
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No no ...no offence taken I thought you missed my point on the basis I was unaware of refractive index and I can see why with the introduction.
You can not offend me I am all most folk critise me for and more... I accept personal responsibility for the slack way and the simplified way I post.
I read about it some time ago when I was looking at the Bose condensate stuff (and that certainly relates to the areas you suggest) but when I saw it this time given the chat on similar matters I thought I would post... I dont think folk think of light as having any speed but C and that C was selected for constant... but it is not.

alex
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Old 18-11-2008, 09:24 PM
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Not that it's related to the article, but I am quite sympathetic to MOND and the tired photon hypothesis. It must be quite exhausting, travelling at c all the time. When I was looking at some far off quasar once I remember thinking how those poor photons, which had been travelling uninterrupted for nigh on 13 billion years before obliterating themselves on my unworthy retina, could barely crawl through my cornea and over the inner edge of my iris. Oh, the darlings...
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Old 18-11-2008, 09:59 PM
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Tired or not I wonder how many photons there be to the cubic meter...there would be photons from everywhere ... I like to imagine the many sources and how at any place there must be a representation of everywhere even if each object only contribute one single photon there would be a few.

Tired light... it will meet fiece opposition but I often wonder if the background radiaition could be tired light from beyond where we can imagine light could come from... if you see what I mean.

MOND I am not really sure what is says exactly really so I will read up on it again... anything gravity related I like.

alex


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Old 19-11-2008, 06:46 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
N I dont think folk think of light as having any speed but C and that C was selected for constant... but it is not.

alex
C is defined as the speed of light in vacuum.
And, it is a constant..
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Old 19-11-2008, 07:05 AM
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Well we need a V as well for the other mediums.
I was wondering Bojan how did they work out the speed of light considering when it was arrived at men did not have the vacuum of space to work in...
I will have a look today if I can fit it in my otherwise lazy planned day.

alex
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Old 19-11-2008, 07:37 AM
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C appears as a constant in Maxwell's equations (they describe the behaviour of electromagnetic field).
Have a look here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro..._wave_equation
It depends on e0 and u0, electrical and magnetic permeability constants of vacuum, presented and explained in a table lower on the page.

Not as simple as eh ?



And, we do have V for other mediums, but this is not fundamental, nor it is a constant.
BTW, by knowing electric and magnetic properties of the medium, the velocity of light in it can be calculated with the same formula (v=1/SQRT(e0*u0)). of course, the medium have to be transparent too, and obviously those relations will not cover the issue of transparency, for this there are others.
So, optical behaviour (refraction index) of media are determined by their related electromagnetic properties.. strange but true.

Last edited by bojan; 19-11-2008 at 07:50 AM.
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Old 19-11-2008, 07:57 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bojan View Post
C appears as a constant in Maxwell's equations (they describe the behaviour of electromagnetic field).
Have a look here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro..._wave_equation
It depends on e0 and u0, electrical and magnetic permeability constants of vacuum, presented and explained in a table lower on the page.

Not as simple as eh ?



And, we do have V for other mediums, but this is not fundamental, nor it is a constant.
BTW, by knowing electric and magnetic properties of the medium, the velocity of light in it can be calculated with the same formula (v=1/SQRT(e0*u0)). of course, the medium have to be transparent too, and obviously those relations will not cover the issue of transparency, for this there are others.
So, optical behaviour (refraction index) of media are determined by their related electromagnetic properties.. strange but true.
Bojan thank you so much for all that...you know you have got me thinking that there may just be something in this math appraoch that is useful.

I really do appreciate you taking the time to help me and I can assure you your time is not wasted on me ...

alex
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Old 20-11-2008, 05:28 AM
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Light can be slowed down (I think) when it traverses through a Bose-Einstein condensate (weird state of matter at 10^-9 Kelvin).
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Old 20-11-2008, 08:24 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maksutover
Light can be slowed down (I think) when it traverses through a Bose-Einstein condensate (weird state of matter at 10^-9 Kelvin).
I think there was some mention of this in the BBC documentary series Absolute Zero.
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Old 20-11-2008, 01:10 PM
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Quote:
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Light can be slowed down (I think) when it traverses through a Bose-Einstein condensate (weird state of matter at 10^-9 Kelvin).
Yes I feel you are correct as I spent some time at one time reading about the interesting things surrounding the Bose-Einstein condensate and what you say seems to sit well. Actualy I should go back and read about it again it has been so long it will seem brand new to me..I am an old man with an older memory so it will seem new again

alex
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Old 20-11-2008, 04:59 PM
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Lol this is like revision for me from first year physics.
I have a question though when matter reaches the event horizon of a black hole what exactly happens to it i know that it is stretched out by the lorentz factor as it speeds up due to the black holes gravity but what happens to it after that. Is it the massively compressed due to gravity and it coalesce into a single point at the center of the black hole or is it converted to energy due to the forces acting upon it?

Sorry if that was confusing i hope someone can understand and possibly shed some light on it.
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Old 20-11-2008, 07:08 PM
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Originally Posted by Mombat View Post
Lol this is like revision for me from first year physics.
I have a question though when matter reaches the event horizon of a black hole what exactly happens to it i know that it is stretched out by the lorentz factor as it speeds up due to the black holes gravity but what happens to it after that. Is it the massively compressed due to gravity and it coalesce into a single point at the center of the black hole or is it converted to energy due to the forces acting upon it?

Sorry if that was confusing i hope someone can understand and possibly shed some light on it.
I can not answer that I have not yet accepted they are what we have theorised them to be

Probably depends to a degree who you ask. Steven Hawkin has proposed radiation can escape but I think I saw something that may not be in favour.

I would imagine (and this is unsupported and pure speculation) that there would possibly be a process where it progresses from spagggtfication to vapourisation and the mass spread around as it compresses... in other words it seems that if you threw in a brick it would purverise well before compression and the forces would by such that radiation will no doubt be generated I think as exotic rays as oppossed to heat...however as the idea goes nothing can escape including radiation... Mr Hawking has shown however radiation can escape but I think it does not necessarily come from matter being eaten as such...but on his idea it seems there is room for a black hole to evaporate... again I am not sure that is currently popular.

Anyways I thought all we know goes out the door on the "inside" of a black hole..beyond the event horizon as they say...so how can we descibe what is going on. I wonder if nuclie are packed as if they are marbles in a jar...or packed like soap bubbles stacked in the same jar..with out marbles that is... or does it become some sort of soup made of quarks and stuff...

But the a black hole equates I think to a singularity which has interesting qualities such that matter and time are really different to what we can understand.

alex
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