PDA

View Full Version : A break in the time/space continuum


Buccaneer
01-04-2012, 06:59 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s one thing to make an object invisible, like Harry Potter’s mythical cloak. But scientists have made an entire event impossible to see. They have invented a time masker.

Think of it as an art heist that takes place before your eyes and surveillance cameras. You don’t see the thief strolling into the museum, taking the painting down or walking away, but he did. It’s not just that the thief is invisible — his whole activity is.

What scientists at Cornell University did was on a much smaller scale, both in terms of events and time. It happened so quickly that it’s not even a blink of an eye. Their time cloak lasts an incredibly tiny fraction of a fraction of a second. They hid an event for 40 trillionths of a second, according to a study appearing in Thursday’s edition of the journal Nature.

We see events happening as light from them reaches our eyes. Usually it’s a continuous flow of light. In the new research, however, scientists were able to interrupt that flow for just an instant.

Other newly created invisibility cloaks fashioned by scientists move the light beams away in the traditional three dimensions. The Cornell team alters not where the light flows but how fast it moves, changing in the dimension of time, not space. They tinkered with the speed of beams of light in a way that would make it appear to surveillance cameras or laser security beams that an event, such as an art heist, isn’t happening.

Another way to think of it is as if scientists edited or erased a split second of history. It’s as if you are watching a movie with a scene inserted that you don’t see or notice. It’s there in the movie, but it’s not something you saw, said study co-author Moti Fridman, a physics researcher at Cornell.

The scientists created a lens of not just light, but time. Their method splits light, speeding up one part of light and slowing down another. It creates a gap and that gap is where an event is masked. “You kind of create a hole in time where an event takes place,” said study co-author Alexander Gaeta, director of Cornell’s School of Applied and Engineering Physics. “You just don’t know that anything ever happened.”

This is all happening in beams of light that move too fast for the human eye to see. Using fiber optics, the hole in time is created as light moves along inside a fiber much thinner than a human hair. The scientists shoot the beam of light out, and then with other beams, they create a time lens that splits the light into two different speed beams that create the effect of invisibility by being too fast or too slow. The whole work is a mess of fibers on a long table and almost looks like a pile of spaghetti, Fridman said.

It is the first time that scientists have been able to mask an event in time, a concept only first theorized by Martin McCall, a professor of theoretical optics at Imperial College in London. Gaeta, Fridman and others at Cornell, who had already been working on time lenses, decided to see if they could do what McCall envisioned.

It only took a few months, a blink of an eye in scientific research time. “It is significant because it opens up a whole new realm to ideas involving invisibility,” McCall said.

Researchers at Duke University and in Germany’s Karlsruhe Institute of Technology have made progress on making an object appear invisible spatially. The earlier invisibility cloak work bent light around an object in three dimensions.

Between those two approaches, the idea of invisibility will work its way into useful technology, predicts McCall, who wasn’t part of either team.

The science is legitimate, but it’s still only a fraction of a second, added City College of New York physicist Michio Kaku, who specializes in the physics of science fiction. “That’s not enough time to wander around Hogwarts,” Kaku wrote in an email. “The next step therefore will be to increase this time interval, perhaps to a millionth of a second. So we see that there’s a long way to go before we have true invisibility as seen in science fiction.”

Gaeta said he thinks he can get make the cloak last a millionth of a second or maybe even a thousandth of a second. But McCall said the mathematics dictate that it would take too big a machine — about 18,600 miles long — to make the cloak last a full second. “You have to start somewhere and this is a proof of concept,” Gaeta said.

Still, there are practical applications, Gaeta and Fridman said. This is a way of adding a packet of information to high-speed data unseen without interrupting the flow of information. But that may not be a good thing if used for computer viruses, Fridman conceded.

There may be good uses of this technology, Gaeta said, but “for some reason people are more interested in the more illicit applications.”

.

booradley
01-04-2012, 07:08 PM
The fact that modern technology is starting to make comic book technology look mundane is ... frightening to me. What sort of world are we going to be living in 50 years from now? Boggles the mind ...

Groundhog
01-04-2012, 07:16 PM
Wake me when they've got my hoverboard ready.

molson
01-04-2012, 07:17 PM
The fact that modern technology is starting to make comic book technology look mundane is ... frightening to me. What sort of world are we going to be living in 50 years from now? Boggles the mind ...

On the other hand, look at the Back to the Future franchise's vision of 2015. We got a long way to go in 3 years to live up to that. We've been over-optimistic about our future for a while.

SportsDino
01-04-2012, 07:18 PM
I'm pretty sure modern technology would shock anyone circa 1900, hell someone from 1950 would see people immune to most disease, common use of lasers, machines that do just about everything, world destroying super weapons (nukes), and practical applications of genetic engineering. Some of this comic book technology already exists, and overall we are probably better off for it. I hope technology continues to amaze into the future, that is what will make for a real economy again... not the current pessimistic austerity economics that has become the universal world view (ultimate fail).

Draft Dodger
01-04-2012, 07:20 PM
nope, can't get my brain around it

molson
01-04-2012, 07:23 PM
I'm pretty sure modern technology would shock anyone circa 1900, hell someone from 1950 would see people immune to most disease, common use of lasers, machines that do just about everything, world destroying super weapons (nukes), and practical applications of genetic engineering. Some of this comic book technology already exists, and overall we are probably better off for it. I hope technology continues to amaze into the future, that is what will make for a real economy again... not the current pessimistic austerity economics that has become the universal world view (ultimate fail).

People from 1950 would be surprised by that stuff, but they'd also probably be wondering why we don't have vacation houses on the moon yet, or why it's still a burden to travel just from one side of the country to another. A lot of "futuristic" fiction written decades ago is set around 2000-2015, and we've come up short in a lot of it.

I know there's been huge scientific and technological advances, but I'm sometimes surprised how similar our lives are as to when I was a kid in around 1985. The big change for regular people is obviously the internet, I bet that 25-year difference was a lot more pronounced in a lot of places between say, 1900-1925.

Buccaneer
01-04-2012, 07:34 PM
molson, try the similarity of our lives from 1970 compared to now. The great equalizer in the past 40 years for the masses has been TV (and to a lesser extent, movies), I think. The medium has changed for viewing and for communicating but one could argue that either one has not increased all that much.

In my view of technological changes, stuff like a time masker does not interest me but stuff like a much better mousetrap (e.g., Apple products) do.

Glengoyne
01-04-2012, 07:39 PM
..

I know there's been huge scientific and technological advances, but I'm sometimes surprised how similar our lives are as to when I was a kid in around 1985. The big change for regular people is obviously the internet, I bet that 25-year difference was a lot more pronounced in a lot of places between say, 1900-1925.

Certainly 1900-1950 trumps 1951-2000. 1900-1925 was pretty huge with the likes of Edison, Ford, Tesla, Einstien, and Marconi laying a pretty big foundation for the rest of the century.

RendeR
01-04-2012, 07:50 PM
molson, try the similarity of our lives from 1970 compared to now. The great equalizer in the past 40 years for the masses has been TV (and to a lesser extent, movies), I think. The medium has changed for viewing and for communicating but one could argue that either one has not increased all that much.

In my view of technological changes, stuff like a time masker does not interest me but stuff like a much better mousetrap (e.g., Apple products) do.



Wait, you're saying that apple products are a better mousetrap? Technology DESIGNED to enslave you to one company, is advancement? Your future ideolgy scares me a little =)