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But can we combine light to produce matter and antimatter?
Using sodium atoms and two laser beams, they made a new kind of medium that entangles light and slows it down.
The CfA researchers used an easier method. They shot laser beams through a dense cloud of rubidium and helium gas. (Rubidium, in its solid or natural form, is a soft, silver-white metal.) The light bounced from atom to atom, gradually slowing down until it stopped.
Hi. I read some time back where a lady had not only slowed down light but had actually stopped it. After a short while she restarted it with a laser beam and it quickly regained its' original speed. Thanks for comments. Joe L. OganAfter reading all of the learned discussion, (Some of which I understood) I am not so sure about my statement being correct. I hope that the part I remember about the lady getting a $500,000.00 tax free grant to do with as she sees fit is correct. I gather that it was a very significant discovery. Thanks for comments. Joe L. Ogan
Photons don't bounce on atoms, they are absorbed and another photon is emitted... This takes some times so you could think it slows down the photon but it is not the same one...
QuotePhotons don't bounce on atoms, they are absorbed and another photon is emitted... This takes some times so you could think it slows down the photon but it is not the same one...Interesting. What causes it to emit, just having too much energy to store it all? If so, it seems strange that it would accept more energy and kick out old, rather than simply letting the original photon pass by.