Scientists Break the Speed Of Light

Paul-o-Rama

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http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2000/07/20/speedlight000720.html

Scientists break speed of light

Last Updated:

Friday, November 10, 2000 | 11:57 PM ET

CBC News











Scientists have finally exceeded the speed of light, causing a light pulse to travel hundreds of times faster than normal. It raced so fast the pulse exited a specially-prepared chamber before it even finished entering it.

The experiment is the first-ever evidence of faster-than-light motion.

lightlab11.jpg


The NEC Research Institute lab





The result appears to be at odds with one of the basic principles of

Albert Einstein's theory of relativity, that nothing can go faster than

the speed of light in a vacuum, about 186,000 miles per second. However,

Lijun Wang, one of the scientists from the NEC Research Institute in

Princeton, N.J., says their findings are not at odds with Einstein.

She says their experiment only disproves the general misconception that nothing can move faster than the speed of light.

The scientific statement "nothing with mass

can travel faster than the speed of light" is an entirely different

belief, one that has yet to be proven wrong. The NEC experiment caused

a pulse of light, a group of waves with no mass, to go faster than

light.

For the experiment, the researchers manipulated a vapour of

laser-irradiated atoms that boost the speed of light waves causing a

pulse that shoots through the vapour about 300 times faster than it

would take the pulse to go the same distance in a vacuum.

Light

travels slower in any medium more dense than a vacuum, which has no

density at all. For example, light travelling through glass slows to

two-thirds its speed in a vacuum. If the glass is altered, the light

can be slowed even further.

The NEC team produced the opposite

effect. Inside a chamber, they changed the state of a vapour in a way

that light travelling through it would travel faster than normal.

When

the pulse of light travelled through the vapour, the pulse reconfigured

as some component waves stretched and others compressed. As the waves

approached the end of the chamber, they recombined, forming the

original pulse.

The key to the experiment was that the pulse

reformed before it could have gotten there by simply travelling through

empty space. This means that, when the waves of the light distorted,

the pulse traveled forward in time.

The NEC researchers published their results in this week's issue of the journal Nature.

 
Yeah, I heard about this today. Apparently its been proposed and tried before, but this was the first time someones actually gotten it to work correctly. Cool shit!
 
...so they broke the speed of light with light. Great, light can go faster than we thought. Just makes my time machine harder to build... *sigh*
 
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Basically, light can go 186000 mps in a vacuum. All they did was make it travel through a medium, like how electricity can travel through wires. But they just made the atoms the energy passes through very unstable so that they would snap and pass the signal at the slightest increase of energy. Kinda like a really quick chain reaction that travels faster than light.
 
Light aint made of atoms. Its made of photons or electromagnetic radiation (depending on which side of the particle/wave duality you're focusing on).
 
orr we could build sweet teleporter machines that don't actually teleport you they just scan your body or object, and then transmit all the data at those ultra highspeeeds and then reasemble you or the object on the otehr side out of a pool of materials...... essentially a clone  and kill machine. hahaha. 
 
Damn, it's so ground breaking that any thread that talks about it on the internet travels faster than a normal thread would!!!
 
No man it happened in 2004, but there was a cover up so they beamed some Moris code for us those of us living in the future (2007) so we could know what they did in the past, and now we all know the truth....
 
now couldn't we conceivably have faster than light communication? if you sent information in this way by manipulating the waves, we could talk with astronauts on mars, or scientists in a different galaxy
 
Im in school and i cant wrap my mind around this so im just gonna wait until i get home and get high, then i'll think about it.
 
ya but those waves would somehow have to be sent through a different medium than space. But the biggest problem with that is that light waves are a completely different thing than radio waves. wonder if one day we will get it to work though.
 
dude don't even ask in here. the shit happening in this thread is just far too advanced for any of us.
 
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