Can lasers emit anticoherent photons? 180°

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http://www.physics.utoledo.edu/~ljc/photonsnap.doc

--shows a photon in stop action ...

But some of those photon samples are 180° out of phase ...

Would that be a technical equipment problem, or do lasers sometimes emit anticoherent photons?

Ray.
 
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A laser that's turned off could well be described as producing equal quantities of anticoherent photons, yes?

- Warren
 
chroot said:
A laser that's turned off could well be described as producing equal quantities of anticoherent photons, yes?

- Warren

No, it could not: We're talking about successive photons: The stop-action photon is a composite image; You're tangenting about simultaneous photons in self-cancellation non production; We are talking about six million individual extant photons of expectedly coherent phase produced successively, a few of which appear to be anticoherent: whence the thread topic.

This would have serious impact on the claims of physics for purity of laser light, coherence, stimulated emission, -theory, when anybody cares,- ... Nobody has ever thought to seek this result but it turned up on a routine, new experiment ... It would have to be factored-out of quantum encryption ...

Were you able to visit that website and turn up your brightness so you can see the question?- It was working then and is working now ... and UC Berkeley is buying his equipment to try for themselves, "at around half a million dollars a pop."

Ray.
 
Last edited:
RaymondKennethPetry said:
Were you able to visit that website and turn up your brightness so you can see the question?- It was working then and is working now ... and UC Berkeley is buying his equipment to try for themselves, "at around half a million dollars a pop."

Ray.

Well I thought that the text is a bit biased...
 
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