Electrical Pulses Break Light Speed Record 68
J'raxis writes "PhysicsWeb writes that 'Pulses that travel faster than light have been sent over a significant distance for the first time. Alain Haché and Louis Poirier of the University of Moncton in Canada transmitted the pulses through a 120-metre cable made from a coaxial 'photonic crystal.' Haché and Poirier emphasize that their experiment does not break any laws of physics. Although the group velocity exceeds the speed of light - an effect permitted by relativity -- each component of the pulse travels slower than light.'"
Re:kinda cool (Score:2, Funny)
In other words, WTF are you talking about???
Re:kinda cool (Score:2, Insightful)
Just out of curiosity, how can the first comment on a subject be redundant? That just strikes me as really bizzare.
(Meta off)
Re:kinda cool (Score:2, Funny)
Well.... (Score:2)
(which some said wasn't feasable), and modems up to 56k (which we all said was impossible)
so we just have to wait a few years until they make ethernet cards out of this
terabit ethernet anyone?
/me thinks his pci bus might not handle the throughput this would offer....
Re:Well.... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Well.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Well.... (Score:2)
What I find most impressive about this is the possibility it has with interstellar communication. (Which of course won't be usefull until we have someone to communicate with, but it's a start.) If a message can be sent faster than light, then one of the bigger problems with exploring anything further away than our solar system would be lessened.
Of course, the real trick would be to figure out how to send solid energy (matter) at such speeds.
Re:Well.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Well.... (Score:1)
if you had a ball that was rolling under a rug, the end of the curvature of the rug at the position of said ball would reach the outside of a rug before said ball came out.
If you had a 2x4 1 light year long and moved it back and forth you could get a message there faster than light.
Re:Well.... (Score:2)
Re:Well.... (Score:1)
Remember -- an example of relativity working of not proof, but a counterexample is enough to discard the entire theory.
--ravyn
Re:Well.... (Score:2)
One of my professors last semester had a really good electrical engineering example of something that works in sort of the same way and also explained why this wouldn't work for data transmission, but unfortunately I can't remember what it was...
Re:Well.... (Score:1)
Uh, wouldn't it be easier to express this as a cosine curve, then?
Re:Well.... (Score:1)
Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:2)
Re:Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:4, Informative)
Take a look at this applet [netspace.net.au] and this page [netspace.net.au]. They give a good illustration of the concept:
[...]If dn(v)/dv is sufficiently negative, it can reduce the denominator in Equation (3) to less than one, yielding a group velocity greater than c. Why is this not a contradiction of special relativity? No energy or information needs to travel at the group velocity in order for the shape of the wave to exhibit features that move at that speed. If you tried to signal someone with a superluminal pulse by dropping a shutter in its path at the last moment, you'd find you were too late: the pulse would happily "pass through" the shutter, because every influence that was actually responsible for its appearance on the other side would have passed through already.
Re:Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:1)
Re:Uhhh, this is nothing new. (Score:2)
Think of yourself as a piece of information. You are standing on a train. Think of the train as the light wave, travelling at the speed of light. You are now walking from the back of the train to the front. Relative to the earth, you are travelling faster than the train, thus faster than the speed of light. However, relative to the train, you are travelling at walking speed. The problem is, in order to minimize your time on the train, you start your journey by jumping onto the last car as the train leaves the terminal, and jumping out of the first car as the train approaches the destination platform. Given a sufficiently long train, you could send a large amount of data that would begin to arrive quickly, however you must first establish the carrier (the train) and then you must offload the information. Your net gain should be a faster arrival of the data, but most likely the data will be offloaded at the same speed as usual. Ar you as confused as I am yet?
OK, I think I'll go read the article now.
Sounds familiar (Score:4, Funny)
My team words just the opposite: Each individual working at breakneck speeds, but the group never gets there fast enough.
Now if they only could stop posting to /.
Measure? (Score:1)
D
Re:Measure? (Score:2)
if object A is sent from 1 LY away and takes 1 LY to get here, it's traveling at the speed of light.
if object B is sent from 1 LY away and takes
I think.
Re:Measure? (Score:1)
Beating Carrier Waves Against One Another (Score:1, Informative)
That's the same way that radar worked back when it was just an oscilloscope hooked to a radio. (Oscillation Scope.) You don't actually run a clock to see how far the signal has travelled, rather you compare it against another signal for a time difference. Very easy to do with analog.
Re:Measure? (Score:2)
Re:Measure? (Score:2)
I think you are missing a point. The original poster seems to think that not only is there some speed limit at c but also a limit to your ability to measure speeds greater than c. There's some interesting idea in the guy's head that makes him think this even though no popular (or unpopular) article on science says any such thing. I'd love to know where this idea came from.
To follow through with your analogy: if someone had said to a brain surgeon "how can you possibly operate on that person they weigh more that 100kg?" I suspect that not a few people would be very curious to know what the questioner was talking about.
Re:Measure? (Score:1)
Er...no. You don't need to be a physicist to measure the velocity or understand the concept of a velocity and I strongly suspect the original poster understands these ideas quite well.
Of course you don't need to be a physicist to understand velocity. Sure someone might have a concept of velocity, but it doesn't mean that they know the methods and formulas used in wave motion to calculate the velocity of a particle.
The original poster seems to think that not only is there some speed limit at c but also a limit to your ability to measure speeds greater than c. There's some interesting idea in the guy's head that makes him think this even though no popular (or unpopular) article on science says any such thing. I'd love to know where this idea came from.
And without being a physicist, I too thought that there was a universal speed limit (without getting into relativity)... the speed of light. Usually that's taught in gradeschools and highschools, so I'm guessing that's where "some interesting idea in the guy's head" came from.
must've been.... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Either that, or the scientists crunched the numbers over a nice Italian meal at some bistro...
"Laser smashes light speed record" (Score:2, Interesting)
Next they send a 3.7-microsecond long laser pulse into the caesium cell, which is 6 centimetres long, and show that, at the correct wavelength, it emerges from the cell 62 nanoseconds sooner than would be expected if it had travelled at the speed of light. 62 nanoseconds might not sound like much, but since it should only take 0.2 nanoseconds for the pulse to pass through the cell, this means that the pulse has been travelling at 310 times the speed of light. Moreover, unlike previous superluminal experiments, the input and output pulse shapes are essentially the same.
Correct me when I'm wrong, but doesn't this mean that the pulse went out of the cell 61.8 ns before it went in? When I try to picture this phenomena my brain just overloads and dumps the core.
Re:"Laser smashes light speed record" (Score:1)
If you put one of these setups next to a light bulb and turned them on at the same time, the laser pulse would get there first.
Justin
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2)
It's not like we calculate time in relation to light except when measuring the distance to stars. Even then it's still light YEARS, so it's being converted to a time unit we understand. It would be like miles per hour, it's just that it's such a large number we use a conversion factor that makes it relatively small.
FTL means faster than light, not backwards through time.
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2, Informative)
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:1)
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:1)
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:1)
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2)
Taking :
A^2 + B^2 = C^2
Therefore C^2 - A^2 = B^2
And assuming that A (velocity through space) > C
C^2 - A^2 < 0
B^2 < 0
B = (Something) x (Root of -1)
That's not "backwards in time", that's moving through a complex plane of time or something. I'm not claiming to know what that means, just that "backwards in time" doesn't make sense. Can someone help me understand this?
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:1)
First, the a^2+b^2=c^2 thing is for calculating with lengths, not velocities.
Secondly, you, (and the original poster), are using good old Euclidean geometry to calculate a "length". Your algebra is fine, it's just that space-time doesn't work the same way. The rule (for flat space-time) is that s^2 = x^2+y^2+z^2-t^2. Note the minus sign before the t. It's the presence of this minus sign that leads to many of the apparently counter-intuitive results of Special Relativity.
In General Relativity, not even the simple (+1 +1 +1 -1) metric works. The simple constants are, in general, replaced with functions involving the space-time co-ordinates. The effect is the same as curving the geometry; the curvature has an effect on test particles which is the same as the observed effects of gravity.
I realise that the above is over simplified and the purists are probably shuddering already, but to do the subject justice requires much more space and time than I have available right now.
Paul
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2)
If you can send faster than light communication in two different reference frames that are moving past each other at a high (but sub-c) velocity, then the basic equations of special relativity (length contraction, etc) say that you'd be able to relay a signal back to its starting point before it was originally transmitted.
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2)
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2, Informative)
Though this isnt really travel, as such, the only FTL phenomenon we know of is quantum teleportation. This is when you "entangle" two particles. When you entangle 2 particles, they act as one. If you changed the polarity of one, the other would instantly change to the opposite polarity, even if it is accross the galaxy. However, this still does not allow FTL star-trek teleportation or communication. Due to good old Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, you cannot measure a particle's properties exactly, because doing so would disrupt the particle.
If you and your friend Bob both had entangled photons, and you were at Alpha Centauri, you could vertically polarize your photon. Bob's photon back at Earth would instantly become horizontally polarized. But it Bob tried to measure his photon by sending it though a polarizing filter, he would only have a 1 in 4 chance of correctly measuring the photon. It's essentialy random.
The only way around this is for you to tell Bob that you polarized your photon vertically. This can only be done at light speed with a radio signal. Then Bob can send the photon through a horizontal filter.
Re:FTL - information backwards in time (Score:2)
Say you send half of a large number of these photons somewhere.
Then at a predetermined time (war say) you start using them in a particular prearranged way and Bob measures them accordingly. So that any changes in expected result would be the information (plus error correction of course), which is now transferred FTL and not easily jammable.
So is this possible? There's probably something I'm missing right? Can't be as easy as that
What bugs me about this (Score:3, Interesting)
In this case, the effect occurs close to the intentional absorbtion band, where signals get reflected because of impedance mismatch. So, the signal gets strongly attenuated. Gets there faster, but is much weaker, yes?
The effect of the thermal noise of the receiver in the band of interest thus gets more significant. More relative noise, less bits per pulse (think AM).
So, what would be a 1 km cable capable of carrying 100 mb/s (for example -- I'm pulling these numbers outa my...) now looks like a 100 m cable capable of carrying 1 Mb/s... great for wire latency, lousy for bandwidth.
Now, we all know that for typical packet sizes, wire latency is insignificant to data serialization latency: the time it takes for the last bit in a packet to leave the transmitter, compared to the first bit. So, you've cut wire latency by 90% and increased data latency by much more.
What am I missing here? Or, is there, as I suspect, NSTASFL
Re:FTL Pulse = Science; Perpetual Motion = Hoax??? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:FTL Pulse = Science; Perpetual Motion = Hoax??? (Score:3, Informative)
This is the basic misunderstanding of what the phase, group, and signal velocities of a wave system are. The bottom line is that you cannot send information using these superluminal signals, so there are no time travel/relativity problems. A nice Java applet showing this is here [netspace.net.au].
Einstein wins again (Score:2)
Isn't this just - (Score:2)
Cerenkov radiation, that's been known for decades?
Re:Isn't this just - (Score:1)
I believe it is not at all related. Cerenkov radiation is the result of a charged particle moving through a medium at a speed faster then the speed of light in that medium, like a proton moving through water at 0.9c. This generates photons, but they move at the speed of light in the medium.
It's the shape of the pulse... (Score:5, Informative)
This allows the peak of the pulse to move faster than light speed. However, the leading edge of the pulse does not.
This is why this is not a technique for sending information faster than the speed of light.
Isn't this old news? (Score:1)
Plus my reading of this article leaves me thinking they were actually moving their signal at 2/3 c since they were working in a medium where you'd only expect light to travel 8"/ns instead of the 12"/ns in vacum.
Speeding up time (Score:1)
Re:Speeding up time (Score:2)
Dx^2 + Dy^2 + Dz^2 - Dt^2 = constant
Where Dx, Dy, Dz and Dt are distances in x,y,z,t directions.
But noone knows how to get an imaginary velocity...
Applet that Illustrates This (Score:2, Informative)
I found this on Greg Egan's (the SF author and programmer) site: Subluminal Applet [netspace.net.au]
More FTL "tricks" (Score:1, Informative)
The classic example uses a bright searchlight reflecting of the clouds at night, but I suppose a laser pointer in a large auditiourm would work well too. The bright spot can be "moved" faster than light accross the clouds, just by moving the light source through a few minutes of arc.
Unfortunatly the spot is not a physical thing, just an image. No real information is moved FTL.
Brain Teaser (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, I may be the dope - I never verified if this was true. Anyone know?
Re:Brain Teaser (Score:1)
Re:Brain Teaser (Score:1)
Re:Brain Teaser (Score:2)
Same with tugging on a lightyear long rope doesn't "instantly" send information to the otherend
Re:Brain Teaser (Score:2)
Re:Brain Teaser (Score:2)
There are no laws stating that two things cannot appear to move faster than light relative to each other to *an observer*. Two spaceships moving at the speed of light towards each other, and starting 2 light seconds apart, will hit in 1 second. From your point of view.
On the interior of the spaceship, time dilation will take effect, and it will be much longer.