To test this idea, Franke-Arnold's group shone a rectangular beam of green light into a cylinder made of ruby, which they spun at up to 30 revolutions per second. Ruby is a well known slow-light material, and transmits light with a group velocity of just a few tens of metres per second. By changing the rotation of the ruby from clockwise to counter-clockwise, the researchers could detect a rotation of the light rectangle by about one-third of a degree (see figure). What is more, when they ramped up the intensity of the light, the rectangle's rotation increased to about 10° – probably because the photons were then undergoing several absorption and re-emission cycles.
Fascinating!
Zz.
No comments:
Post a Comment
The comments posted to this blog are MODERATED. All comments will require MY APPROVAL to be released, so please do NOT post multiple comments just because you do not see it appearing immediately!
All SPAM will never be approved for release in this blog, no matter how much you try to disguise it. CRACKPOTTERY and attempts at advertising your personal theory and website/blog will be treated in the same manner as unwanted SPAM.