Scientists Trap Light In Nano-Soup 110
An anonymous reader writes "Physicists at the Bhavnagar University in Gujarat, India have trapped light in a nano-soup concoction. The chance discovery could pave the way for lab-on-a-chip devices for processing optical information. As of now there is no theoretical explanation for why the fluid has the effects it does on laser light."
Obvious reason... (Score:1, Funny)
Sacred Cattle Make Great Mock-Turtle! (Score:1)
Waiting in a hot tureen!
Who for such dainties would not stoop?
Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup!
Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup!
Beau--ootiful Soo-oop!
Beau--ootiful Soo-oop!
Soo--oop of the e--e--evening,
Beautiful, beautiful Soup!
Beautiful Soup! Who cares for fish,
Game, or any other dish?
Who would not give all else for two
Pennyworth only of Beautiful Soup?
Pennyworth only of beautiful Soup?
Beau--ootiful Soo-oop!
Beau--ootiful Soo-oop!
Soo--oop of the e--e--evening,
Beautifu
Still waiting... (Score:1)
the message (Score:4, Funny)
Brian: "Thats not Nano-Soup, its your Cheerios."
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Waiter (Score:2, Funny)
It looks like the backstroke, sir.
Thank you, thank you, I'll be here all week.
Campbells releases new flavor (Score:1, Funny)
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Great new book (Score:1)
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Excuse me (Score:1)
Excuse me, waiter. There's a light beam in my nano soup!
The photons took too long to order. (Score:5, Funny)
My... (Score:3, Funny)
"You want Nano-Bread? Three dollars extra!" (Score:1)
FRIST SOPU! (Score:2, Funny)
Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil (Score:5, Interesting)
There is probably also a maximum amount of energy you can store per unit volume, though I'd guess they don't have that worked out yet.
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Some physicist please tell us what happens.
Re:Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil (Score:4, Informative)
Assuming they do find some way of adding more photons without losing what they've already got, the two options are:
1) The container fills up.
2) The container breaks.
Either way, nothing catastrophic would occur, unless they managed to contain a lot more energy. Just a flash of light. You can see from the photos in tfa, that the photons don't exhibit the same pattern that they did when the laser was firing (indicating some internal diffraction), so there wouldn't be a danger of having the equivalent of a more powerful laser shooting out in the same direction as the original beam. Then comes thermodynamics...It unlikely that they'd be able to contain energy in excess of the energy they're putting into containment (understatement), and entropy usually makes it so you have to spend a lot more energy, just to break even.
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2. Fill them sequentially with a high-powered laser.
3. Unleash them simultaneously with a high-powered x N laser burst at the target (where N = number of chambers).
4. ???
5. Profit(able weapon)
6. Sell consumer version of weapon for say welding based on normal hand lasers and long charge times.
7. Profit(even more)
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Or even Harry Mudd and enough Venus Drug I can contaminate the Water Supply with it.
"I wish they all could be green or-i-on Giiiirrrrllllss . . .
Pug
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Re:Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil (Score:1)
Re:Better than flashlights or the Light of Elendil (Score:3, Interesting)
The unusual fluid, they say, works at room temperature, holds photons for far longer than other systems, and can also be tuned with a magnet to store any wavelength of visible light
That is interesting. I wonder if they could extend it to trap other EM frequencies. It would make an interesting cloaking technology in my mind. Can absorb and possibly redirect radar, light, microwaves. It would seem to make decent shielding from x-rays in medical labs, who knows. I wish it said how much energy the magnetic fields took to sustain, and how many photons they can capture per area. If this turns out to be legit...
No theoretical explanation? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No theoretical explanation? (Score:5, Insightful)
Currently they have ideas, but haven't proven the math. If the math can't be made to work, either the underlying theory is wrong, or something else is happening.
Re:No theoretical explanation? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's good to remember that "theory" and "hypothesis" are quite distinct in scientific circles. In science, a belief is not a theory. A belief is either a hypothesis that can be tested or an article of faith. Since these are research scientists and this has no clear ties to any religion I can see, I'm going to bet they'll want their hypothesis tested.
They'll want the experiment set up specifically with storage of the light in mind, since this was a surprise discovery this time. Then they'll want some way to prove, mathematically or empirically (preferably both) that the light is getting trapped consistently and how that's being done.
Then, they'll want others to repeat the experiment in other labs from their write-up and get consistent results.
Then, when scientists can use the explanation for the light getting trapped as a portion of further work and it become useful to just assume the explanation is true and move on to work based on it... then it's a theory.
Or... that's how I'd think of the words "hypothesis" and "theory" from my interested lay understanding of research science. In short, a hypothesis is an idea about something happening under certain circumstances or why something happens in those circumstances that has not been properly vetted by experiments and mathematics. A hypothesis can be right or wrong, and noone knows until it is tested. A theory is a hypothesis that has been proven reasonably correct by multiple individual teams and can be used as a basis for further work. A theory is sometimes wrong in part, like Newtonian mechanics, but should offer a good enough model to make more discoveries.
In even shorter terms, a scientist says "theoretically" only if the basis for the belief is tested and accepted. Otherwise, it's "hypothetically".
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PS: You were joking, but artificial intelligence, CS theory and other mathematically-based fields are very much scientific in nature and it is a little harsh to dismiss decades of scientific work on these matters. Hypotheses and theories do exist in mathematics, and CS is fancy mathematics.
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Not really though.
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Maybe it's because *they are* one is simply a more refined version of the other. The hypothesis is the seed, the seed doesn't go away if it is found to be valid.
There are no lies, only mis-shapen truths.
Or from Wikipedia: (Score:2)
Or, from the Wikipedia entry:
"it is alleged that many researchers have been shown to speculate that"
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Because the 'effect' is a false positive - wait for the other shoe to drop where they explain their mistake...
The 'claim' is a _dis_claim(er) - big as can be.
That's a bit bland... (Score:3, Funny)
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No definitive explanation.. (Score:4, Interesting)
I know they haven't published an explanation on this yet, but does anyone know what kind of power this sort of process takes? Power consumption would obviously be germane to computing using photons, which the article discusses. Also, what effect does the stasis have on the photon?
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Seriously though, this is cool stuff, but probably at the absolute minimum 10 years from seeing mass market application.
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I believe the author of the article is confused. A ferrofluid is a suspension of very small magnetic particles. To keep the particles from clumping, they are coated with a asymmetrical molecule, one side of which will stick to the particl
trapped light in a nano-soup concoction (Score:1)
Data Processing? (Score:1)
Does it come in Campbells chunky? (Score:2)
Kerosine? (Score:2)
I turned on my flashlight and saw: (Score:2)
"HELP! I AM TRAPPED IN A NANO SOUP FACTORY"
Not just for breakfast any more! (Score:1)
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Mighty Boosh! (Score:1, Funny)
Tasty Soup Soup
Spicy carrot and corriander
Chilli chowder
Crouton Crouton
Crunch friends in a liquid broth
I am gespatchio Oh!
I am a summer soup Mmmm!
Miso Miso
Fighting in the dojo
Miso Miso
Oriental Prince in the land of soup
errr
3 Profit.
In the USA SHARKS WITH FRIGGIN' HOT GRITS DOWN PANTS do YOU!!!
or something.
"Storing photons" (Score:1)
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It's not just the energy. If I understand the article properly, and it works like other photon-storage schemes, the phase, polarization, etc. of the photons are also preserved, so that the light which is released is equivalent to the original light. It's possible there could be some frequency-changing effects, as in non-linear opt
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If the actual photons are being stored, then it should be possible to use a femto-second laser to send a pulse into the soup, then by timing the turn-off right, get the photons to exit either in the forward direction or in reverse.
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If it does turn out to just be storing energy, it would be interesting to see why it is converted back into photons of the same wavelength when the field is turned off.
On the other hand, if it is just refracting the light, I could imaging this being used to create a sort of DRAM for photons. The reason I say DRAM is because I imagine it would have to be refreshed in order to r
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In an atom there are also forbidden energy transitions and metastable states. Maybe in the presence of a magnetic field the hyperfine structure of these nanoparticles causes new metastable states to arise in the structure of the molecule. Then, light of a particular frequ
India's such a terrible place... (Score:1, Troll)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hole_of_Calcutta [wikipedia.org]
Re:A question... (Score:4, Informative)
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He also didn't think of gurlz kissing gurlz (Score:1, Troll)
God never thought that far ahead?
I'm on a diet... (Score:2, Funny)
How much Soup.... (Score:1)
The charge of the light brigade (Score:2)
Ha! Child's play! (Score:2)
Photon computing... not quite there (Score:1)
Is this the place . . . (Score:2)
And now it's light trapping nano-soup!
(Of course it will be sold in dehydrated form, so you have to add water and apply your own magnetic field before it's ready.)
Doctor Who? (Score:2)
ZARDOZ (Score:1)