Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




STELLAR CHEMISTRY
First light: NIST researchers develop new way to generate superluminal pulses
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) May 08, 2012


In four-wave mixing, researchers send "seed" pulses of laser light into a heated cell containing atomic rubidium vapor along with a separate "pump" beam at a different frequency. The vapor amplifies the seed pulse and shifts its peak forward, making it superluminal. At the same time, photons from the inserted beams interact with the vapor to generate a second pulse called the "conjugate." Its peak, too, can travel faster or slower depending on how the laser is tuned and the conditions inside the gain medium. Credit: NIST.

Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed a novel way of producing light pulses that are "superluminal"-in some sense they travel faster than the speed of light.

The technique, called four-wave mixing, reshapes parts of light pulses and advances them ahead of where they would have been had they been left to travel unaltered through a vacuum.

The new method could be used to improve the timing of communications signals and to investigate the propagation of quantum correlations.

According to Einstein's special theory of relativity, light traveling in a vacuum is the universal speed limit. No information can travel faster than light.

But there's kind of a loophole. A short burst of light arrives as a sort of (usually) symmetric curve like a bell curve in statistics. The leading edge of that curve can't exceed the speed of light, but the main hump, the peak of the pulse, can be skewed forward or backward, arriving sooner or later than it normally would.

Recent experiments have generated "uninformed" faster-than-light pulses by amplifying the leading edge of the pulse and attenuating, or cutting off, the back end.

The method introduces a great deal of noise with no great increase in the apparent speed. Four-wave mixing produces cleaner, less noisy pulses with a greater increase in speed by "re-phasing" or rearranging the light waves that make up the pulse.

In four-wave mixing, researchers send 200-nanosecond-long "seed" pulses of laser light into a heated cell containing atomic rubidium vapor along with a separate "pump" beam at a different frequency from the seed pulses. The vapor amplifies the seed pulse and shifts its peak forward so that it becomes superluminal.

At the same time, photons from the inserted beams interact with the vapor to generate a second pulse, called the "conjugate" because of its mathematical relationship to the seed. Its peak, too, can travel faster or slower depending on how the laser is tuned and the conditions inside the laser.

In the experiment, the pulses' peaks arrived 50 nanoseconds faster than light traveling through a vacuum.

One immediate application that the group would like to explore for this system is quantum discord. Quantum discord mathematically defines the quantum information shared between two correlated systems-in this case, the seed and conjugate pulses.

By performing measurements of quantum discord between fast beams and reference beams, the group hopes to determine how useful this fast light could be for the transmission and processing of quantum information.

R. Glasser, U. Vogl and P. Lett. Stimulated generation of superluminal light pulses via four-wave mixing. Physical Review Letters, published online April 26, 2012.

.


Related Links
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Contested 'faster-than-light' experiment yields same results
Paris (AFP) Nov 18, 2011
A fiercely contested experiment that appears to show the accepted speed limit of the Universe can be broken has yielded the same results in a re-run, European physicists said on Friday. But counterparts in the United States said the experiment still did not resolve doubts and the Europeans themselves acknowledged this was not the end of the story. On September 23, the European team i ... read more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY
SpaceX boss admits sleep elusive before ISS launch

Air Force launches 2nd advanced satellite

A trio of Ariane 5 launchers are now at the Spaceport

United Launch Alliance Urges IAM Members to Vote in Favor of New Contract

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Russia could join U.S. in Mars mission

Antarctic stay to mimic Mars mission

Mars Rover Opportunity Hits Paydirt At Endeavour

Ancient Volcanic Blast Provides More Evidence of Water on Early Mars

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Perigee "Super Moon" On May 5-6

India's second moon mission Chandrayaan-2 to wait

European Google Lunar X Prize Teams Call For Science Payloads

Russia to Send Manned Mission to Moon by 2030

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Uranus auroras glimpsed from Earth

Herschel images extrasolar analogue of the Kuiper Belt

New Horizons on Approach: 22 AU Down, Just 10 to Go

New Horizons Aims to Put Its Stamp on History

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
NASA's Spitzer Sees the Light of Alien 'Super Earth'

Looking for Earths by looking for Jupiters

Some giant planets in other systems most likely to be alone

Four white dwarf stars caught in the act of consuming 'earth-like' exoplanets

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Aerojet's AJ26 Flight Engine Successfully Hot-Fire Tested for Orbital's Antares Rocket

Russia Develops Revolutionary Ammonia Rocket Engine

Dragon Expected to Set Historic Course

Aerojet Completes Testing of Next-Generation Exploration Thruster

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
China's Lunar Docking

Shenzhou-9 may take female astronaut to space

China to launch 100 satellites during 2011-15

Three for Tiangong

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Throwing pebbles to divert asteroid?

Dawn Completes 800 Orbits Of Vesta

Mining Asteroids - A New Industry

Dawn Reveals Secrets of Giant Asteroid Vesta




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement