May 30, 2000
Light Exceeds Its Own Speed Limit, or Does
It?
By JAMES GLANZ
he speed at
which light travels through a vacuum, about 186,000 miles per
second, is enshrined in physics lore as a universal speed
limit. Nothing can travel faster than that speed, according
freshman textbooks and conversation at sophisticated wine bars;
Einstein's theory of relativity would crumble, theoretical physics
would fall into disarray, if anything could.
Two new experiments have demonstrated how wrong that comfortable
wisdom is. Einstein's theory survives, physicists say, but the results
of the experiments are so mind-bending and weird that the easily
unnerved are advised--in all seriousness--not to read beyond this
point.
In the most striking of the new experiments a pulse of light
that enters a transparent chamber filled with specially prepared
cesium gas is pushed to speeds of 300 times the normal speed of
light. That is so fast that, under these peculiar
circumstances, the main part of the pulse exits the far side of the
chamber even before it enters at the near side.
It is as if someone looking through a window from home were to see
a man slip and fall on a patch of ice while crossing the street well
before witnesses on the sidewalk saw the mishap occur--a preview of
the future. But Einstein's theory, and at least a shred of common
sense, seem to survive because the effect could never be used to
signal back in time to change the past--avert the accident, in the
example.
A paper on the experiment, by Lijun Wang of the NEC Research
Institute in Princeton, N.J., has been submitted to Nature and is
currently undergoing peer review. It is only the most spectacular
example of work by a wide range of researchers recently who have
produced superluminal speeds of propagation in various materials, in
hopes of finding a chink in Einstein's armor and using the effect in
practical applications like speeding up electrical circuits.
"It looks like a beautiful experiment," said Raymond Chiao, a
professor of physics at the University of California in Berkeley, who,
like a number of physicists in the close-knit community of optics
research, is knowledgeable about Dr. Wang's work.
Dr. Chiao, whose own research laid some of the groundwork for the
experiment, added that "there's been a lot of controversy" over
whether the finding means that actual information--like the news of an
impending accident--could be sent faster than c, the velocity
of light. But he said that he and most other physicists agreed
that it could not.
Though declining to provide details of his paper because it is
under review, Dr. Wang said: "Our light pulses can indeed be
made to travel faster than c. This is a special property of
light itself, which is different from a familiar object like a
brick," since light is a wave with no mass. A brick could not
travel so fast without creating truly big problems for physics, not to
mention humanity as a whole.
A paper on the second new experiment, by Daniela Mugnai, Anedio
Ranfagni and Rocco Ruggeri of the Italian National Research Council,
described what appeared to be slightly faster-than-c
propagation of microwaves through ordinary air, and was published in
the May 22 issue of Physical Review Letters.
The kind of chamber in Dr. Wang's experiment is normally used to
amplify waves of laser light, not speed them up, said
Aephraim M. Steinberg, a physicist at the University of Toronto. In
the usual arrangement, one beam of light is shone on the
chamber, exciting the cesium atoms, and then a second beam passing
thorugh the chamber soaks up some of that energy and gets amplified
when it passes through them.
But the amplification occurs only if the second beam is tuned to a
certain precise wavelength, Dr. Steinberg said. By cleverly choosing a
slightly different wavelength, Dr. Wang induced the cesium to
speed up a light pulse without distorting it in any way.
"If you look at the total pulse that comes out, it doesn't actually
get amplified," Dr. Steinberg said.
There is a further twist in the experiment, since only a
particularly strange type of wave can propagate through the cesium.
Waves Light signals, consisting of packets of waves, actually
have two important speeds: the speed of the individual peaks
and troughs of the light waves themselves, and the speed
of the pulse or packet into which they are bunched. A pulse may
contain billions or trillions of tiny peaks and troughs. In air the
two speeds are the same, but in the excited cesium they are not only
different, but the pulses and the waves of which they are composed can
travel in opposite directions, like a pocket of congestion on a
highway, which can propagate back from a toll booth as rush hour
begins, even as all the cars are still moving forward.
These so-called backward modes are not new in themselves, having
been routinely measured in other media like plasmas, or ionized gases.
But in the cesium experiment, the outcome is particularly strange
because backward light waves can, in effect, borrow energy from
the excited cesium atoms before giving it back a short time later. The
overall result is an outgoing wave exactly the same in shape and
intensity as the incoming wave; the outgoing wave just leaves early,
before the peak of the incoming wave even arrives.
As most physicists interpret the experiment, it is a low-intensity
precursor (sometimes called a tail, even when it comes first) of the
incoming wave that clues the cesium chamber to the imminent arrival of
a pulse. In a process whose details are poorly understood, but whose
effect in Dr. Wang's experiment is striking, the cesium chamber
reconstructs the entire pulse solely from information contained in the
shape and size of the tail, and spits the pulse out early.
If the side of the chamber facing the incoming wave is called the
near side, and the other the far side, the sequence of events is
something like the following. The incoming wave, its tail extending
ahead of it, approaches the chamber. Before the incoming wave's peak
gets to the near side of the chamber, a complete pulse is emitted from
the far side, along with a backward wave inside the chamber that moves
from the far to the near side.
The backward wave, traveling at 300 times c, arrives at the near
side of the chamber just in time to meet the incoming wave. The peaks
of one wave overlap the troughs of the other, so they cancel each
other out and nothing remains. What has really happened is that the
incoming wave has "paid back" the cesium atoms that lent energy on the
other side of the chamber.
Someone who looked only at the beginning and end of the experiment
would see only a pulse of light that somehow jumped forward in
time by moving faster than c.
"The effect is really quite dramatic," Dr. Steinberg said. "For a
first demonstration, I think this is beautiful."
In Dr. Wang's experiment, the outgoing pulse had already traveled
about 60 feet from the chamber before the incoming pulse had reached
the chamber's near side. That distance corresponds to 60 billionths of
a second of light travel time. But it really wouldn't allow
anyone to send information faster than c, said Peter W.
Milonni, a physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory. While the peak
of the pulse does get pushed forward by that amount, an early "nose"
or faint precursor of the pulse has probably given a hint to the
cesium of the pulse to come.
"The information is already there in the leading edge of the
pulse," Dr. Milonni said. "You can get the impression of sending
information superluminally even though you're not sending
information."
The cesium chamberhas reconstructed the entire pulse shape, using
only the shape of the precursor. So for most physicists, no
fundamental principles have been smashed in the new work.
Not all physicists agree that the question has been settled,
though. "This problem is still open," said Dr. Ranfagni of the Italian
group, which used an ingenious set of reflecting optics to create
microwave pulses that seemed to travel as much as 25% faster than
c over short distances.
At least one physicist, Dr. Guenter Nimtz [[umlaut over u]] of the
University of Cologne, holds the opinion that a number of experiments,
including those of the Italian group, have in fact sent information
superluminally. But not even Dr. Nimtz believes that this trick would
allow one to reach back in time. He says, in essence, that the time it
takes to read any incoming information would fritter away any temporal
advantage, making it impossible to signal back and change events in
the past.
However those debates end, however, Dr. Steinberg said that
techniques closely related to Dr. Wang's might someday be used to
speed up signals that normally get slowed down by passing
through all sorts of ordinary materials in circuits. A miniaturized
version of Dr. Wang's setup "is exactly the kind of system you'd want
for that application, Dr. Steinberg said.
Sadly for those who would like to see a computer chip without a
speed limit, the trick would help the signals travel closer to
the speed of light, but not beyond it, he said.