COOL.
1 posted on
04/01/2003 7:25:59 PM PST by
vannrox
To: vannrox
Note to Self:
Don't release anything groundbreaking on April Fools Day. Everything is suspect.
To: vannrox
......<--I made a really cool reply to this post but it isn't here yet.
To: vannrox
the light in the new device travels more than 5 million times slower than normal . . . 1.5 times slower . . .5.3-million fold . . . slowdown
Arrgggh! Pet peeve alert, mathematically, a mere 1-fold slowdown means 0 miles per hour. Saying something is 5 million times slower or 1.5 times slower or 5.3 million times slower is just so much innumeracy.
4 posted on
04/01/2003 7:31:41 PM PST by
stayout
To: vannrox
Any implications re the structure of matter/the universe?
6 posted on
04/01/2003 7:32:25 PM PST by
Quix
(QUALITY RESRCH STDY BTWN BK WAR N PEACE VS BIBLE RE BIBLE CODES AT MAR BIBLECODESDIGEST.COM)
To: vannrox
the Utah effect strikes again....
To: vannrox
Will "slow glass" be next?
8 posted on
04/01/2003 7:34:06 PM PST by
narses
(Christe Eleison)
To: vannrox
What the heck is with the ruby?!
9 posted on
04/01/2003 7:34:24 PM PST by
RandallFlagg
("There are worse things than crucifixion...There are teeth.")
To: vannrox
I misread headline at first, thought it was describing a place I used to work at where they gave me a 286. It took 4 minutes to boot up:
Ultra-simple Desktop Device Slows To A Crawl At Room Temperature
11 posted on
04/01/2003 7:36:58 PM PST by
bwteim
(bwteim=Begin With The End In Mind)
To: vannrox
So can this thing slow down my bedroom activity and ~ummm, ~you know, ~how do I say... my pleasure release?
12 posted on
04/01/2003 7:41:22 PM PST by
Drango
(Two wrongs don't make a right...but three lefts do!)
To: vannrox
I thought this thread was going to be about public school education.
To: vannrox
A small question. Since energy is mv^2, what happens to the the extra energy when the light slows down? Is the wavelength shifted? I assume from reading that it emerges at the same wavelength.
What if you could really slow it down (a millimeter per minute). You then pump a powerful laser in for a few minutes and turn it off. You then turn off the original laser that works on the chromium atoms. What happens to the enery? The ruby melts? Or do you get one heck of a beam out the other end (i.e. suitable for punching through lots of nifty things)? Or do you get a slow release?
Just asking.
To: vannrox
I was just mentioning something similar to this to my local bar-friend the other day.
He wanted to know if a short packet of light (say 2-3 inches in length) were propagated in this manner, if one could see the packet traverse the room. I said I think that it only slows while it is going through the slowing-device.
He then wanted to know if the pulses of light would bunch up as they entered the slowing-device, causing a standing wave or some bunching phenomenon at the "entrance". I said that I didnt think so, because light doesnt bunch up at a (for example) window (does it?).
We then concentrated on a bug crawling across the bar.
17 posted on
04/01/2003 8:48:16 PM PST by
Diddley
(Apr 1, 2003)
To: vannrox
This implies that even a moron can now think at the speed of light ....
22 posted on
04/02/2003 6:52:35 AM PST by
sphinx
To: vannrox
Ultra-simple Desktop Device Slows Light To A Crawl At Room Temperature Hell, I thought it was an article about my dial-up modem.
26 posted on
04/02/2003 9:48:07 AM PST by
KC Burke
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