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First Demonstration Of Time Cloaking

  • First Demonstration Of Time Cloaking
    Physicists have created a 'hole in time' using the temporal equivalent of an invisibility cloak
    KFC 07/14/2011

    Invisibility cloaks are the result of physicists' newfound ability to distort electromagnetic fields in extreme ways. The idea is steer light around a volume of space so that anything inside this region is essentially invisible.

    The effect has generated huge interest. The first invisibility cloaks worked only at microwave frequencies but in only a few years, physicists have found ways to create cloaks that work for visible light, for sound and for ocean waves. They've even designed illusion cloaks that can make one object look like another.

    Today, Moti Fridman and buddies, at Cornell University in Ithaca, go a step further. These guys have designed and built a cloak that hides events in time.

    Time cloaking is possible because of a kind of duality between space and time in electromagnetic theory. In particular, the diffraction of a beam of light in space is mathematically equivalent to the temporal propagation of light through a dispersive medium. In other words, diffraction and dispersion are symmetric in spacetime.

    That immediately leads to an interesting idea. Just as its easy to make a lens that focuses light in space using diffraction, so it is possible to use dispersion to make a lens that focuses in time.

    Such a time-lens can be made using an electro-optic modulator, for example, and has a variety of familiar properties. "This time-lens can, for example, magnify or compress in time," say Fridman and co.

    This magnifying and compressing in time is important.
    The trick to building a temporal cloak is to place two time-lenses in series and then send a beam of light through them. The first compresses the light in time while the second decompresses it again.

    But this leaves a gap. For short period, there is a kind of hole in time in which any event is unrecorded. So to an observer, the light coming out of the second time-lens appears undistorted, as if no event has occurred.

    In effect, the space between the two lenses is a kind of spatio-temporal cloak that deletes changes that occur in short periods of time.

    The device has some limitations. The Cornell time cloak lasts only for 110 nanoseconds--that's not long. And Fridman and co say the best it can achieve will be 120 microseconds.
    But it's early days yet. Given the rapid development of spatial cloaks, it'd be a brave man who'd bet on this being the last word.

    Fridman and pals have clearly made themselves an interesting toy but they modestly refrain from speculating about the applications for their time cloak.

    Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1107.2062: Demonstration Of Temporal Cloaking
    http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26992/

    This post was edited by Taun on 7/14/2011 at 7:00 AM

    attachment

    Taun

  • I don't know. I read that, and when I was finished, it seemed as if no time had passed.

    "It won't even be close." - clsi1

    NickDanger

  • lol

    After reading it I wasn't sure if it STOPPED time within the field, or just stopped our ability to see what was going on within...

    In other words, is it an apparent time dilation or real (as in, approaching the speed of light will cause the person approaching it to age slower than the universe around them)...

    Taun

  • Taun said...

    lol

    After reading it I wasn't sure if it STOPPED time within the field, or just stopped our ability to see what was going on within...

    In other words, is it an apparent time dilation or real (as in, approaching the speed of light will cause the person approaching it to age slower than the universe around them)...

    That's kind of what I got out of it.

    Kind of a shame that making love lasts (for most people) longer than 120 nanoseconds.
    Otherwise,this could be fun.

    MannaSooner

  • MannaSooner said...

    That's kind of what I got out of it.

    Kind of a shame that making love lasts (for most people) longer than 120 nanoseconds. Otherwise,this could be fun.

    Well... If its been a while.....

    Taun