| Thread Closed |
Moving faster than the speed of light |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Apr7-07, 03:27 PM | #1 |
|
|
Moving faster than the speed of light
Imagine a material in which light travels slowly. (I don't know much about quantum mechanics, but I think this is a Bose-Einstein condensate.) From my knowledge of electromagnetic radiation, this material would have a very high index of refraction.
I have some questions:
Back to the story. Imagine that you have a slab of this light-slowing material on a table, with an extremely powerful loaded rifle aimed at the slab. You fire the rifle, and the bullet burrows into the slab with enough energy to maintain a speed always greater than 17 meters per second. This means that within the slab, the bullet is traveling faster than the speed of light. More questions:
Thanks. This situation just popped into my head, and I wanted to know how I could model it with physics. |
| Apr7-07, 03:35 PM | #2 |
|
|
What happens is that we get the optical parallel of a sonic boom, and this is known as Cherenkov radiation. This phenomenon can be at least partially explained without QM, but of course QM effects play a role in the full description.
P.S. I am sure you could have chosen a more descriptive, less sensational/controversial, title for this thread. |
| Apr7-07, 03:38 PM | #3 |
|
|
Would this light be ultraviolet/purple? |
| Apr7-07, 03:41 PM | #4 |
|
|
Moving faster than the speed of light |
| Apr8-07, 08:56 PM | #5 |
|
|
I don't know much about it, but I thought what appeared as "slower light", was really just regular speed light being refracted in zig-zags? Do the photons actually slow past 3.0 x 10^8 m/s?
|
| Apr9-07, 08:48 AM | #6 |
|
|
That's correct. The photons travel at c. The absorbion/emission characteristics of the material determine how long it takes for the 'beam' to pass through.
|
| Apr9-07, 08:55 PM | #7 |
|
Recognitions:
|
The speed of light is a constant, c. The velocity of light (and recall there are two velocities we can define - group and phase velocity) is what changes when one moves from one medium to another.
Regarding the transmission of light through a medium - Transmitted light does NOT undergo any absorption or emission, transmitted light passes through the medium as a polarisation wave (i.e. a propagating disturbance in the electron "clouds" of the material). Claude. |
| Apr9-07, 09:39 PM | #8 |
|
|
There has apparently been a misunderstanding on my part for several years, then. Can you elaborate upon the mechanism?
|
| Apr10-07, 01:24 AM | #9 |
|
|
The original evidence for the existence of photons, the photoelectric effect and other atomic phenomena, have been mathematically explained using the classical wave theory of light, together with a quantum mechanical theory of the electron. The reason this is relatively unknown is that it is very embarassing to have Einstein's nobel prize been awarded for his explanation of the photoelectric effect using photons. |
| Apr10-07, 08:51 AM | #10 |
|
|
Well now... ain't that a kick in the pants...
So does that mean that wave/particle duality is a myth? Also, why doesn't the superposition collapse when an electron is encountered.
|
| Apr10-07, 04:47 PM | #11 |
|
|
The wave/particle duality is not a myth, because there are experiments that demonstrate conclusively the existence of photons. Its just that these experiments did not exist until the 1980s, and so a lot of dated discussions follow the outdated notion that photons are appropriate for treating the interaction between light and normal macroscopic materials.
A major source of this misinformation is the most popular Optics text, by Hecht. I was involved with a group who emailed the author and said, basically, "what is the deal with all these discussions of photons? Haven't you read the work of Aspect et al ?" . And his response was very totalitarian: photons exist, this is why Einstein got the nobel prize, end of discussion. |
| Apr10-07, 07:39 PM | #12 |
|
Recognitions:
|
The oscillation of the electron on the 1st atom has its own associated EM field, which then causes the electron on the 2nd atom to oscillate. This continues down the chain. The reason the group velocity of the wave is reduced is because of the phase difference between the drive field and the response of the atom - the motion of the electron lags slightly behind the applied field. The reduction of group velocity of a wave inside a medium is due to this cumulative phase shift. The difference between an absorbed wave and a transmitted wave is that the frequency of the transmitted wave does not lie on a resonance in the band structure of the medium, where an absorbed wave does. This means that for a transmitted wave, light cannot readily couple out of the wave and into the solid - an absorbed wave on the other hand excites plenty of phonon modes and so forth and the energy of the wave is quickly coupled into the solid. One can also expand this picture by taking into account the fact that the response of an atom to an applied E field is nonlinear for high powers, thus accounting for the various nonlinear processes that can occur when an EM wave passes through a solid medium. Also see ZapperZ's post on this topic - http://www.physicsforums.com/showpos...93&postcount=4 , it is somewhat more thorough. Claude. |
| Apr10-07, 08:24 PM | #13 |
|
|
Thanks to both; that was most informative. I'll check out ZZ's post another time, though, since I don't have any background in such things. A bit of studying up on basic optics, phonons, oscillators, etc. would appear to be in order first so I can grasp it better.
I'd be interested to see how a laser burning through something looks under this approach. |
| Thread Closed |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: Moving faster than the speed of light
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Faster than the Speed of Light | Special & General Relativity | 5 | ||
| Light speed....Impossible Faster than light..Probable? | General Physics | 5 | ||
| Speed of light Schmeed of light: things can travel faster | Special & General Relativity | 13 | ||
| Faster than light communication and signals moving backwards in time | Special & General Relativity | 10 | ||
| Faster than the speed of light | High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics | 15 | ||