In the past few years, scientists have found ways to make light go both faster and slower than its usual speed limit, but now researchers at the University of Rochester have published a paper today in Science on how they’ve gone one step further: pushing light into reverse. As if to defy common sense, the backward-moving pulse of light travels faster than light.

Confused? You’re not alone.

“I’ve had some of the world’s experts scratching their heads over this one,” says Robert Boyd, the M. Parker Givens Professor of Optics at the University of Rochester. “Theory predicted that we could send light backwards, but nobody knew if the theory would hold up or even if it could be observed in laboratory conditions.”

Boyd, along with Rochester graduate students George M. Gehring and Aaron Schweinsberg, and undergraduates Christopher Barsi of Manhattan College and Natalie Kostinski of the University of Michigan, sent a burst of laser light through an optical fiber that had been laced with the element erbium. As the pulse exited the laser, it was split into two. One pulse went into the erbium fiber and the second traveled along undisturbed as a reference. The peak of the pulse emerged from the other end of the fiber before the peak entered the front of the fiber, and well ahead of the peak of the reference pulse.

But to find out if the pulse was truly traveling backward within the fiber, Boyd and his students had to cut back the fiber every few inches and re-measure the pulse peaks when they exited each pared-back section of the fiber. By arranging that data and playing it back in a time sequence, Boyd was able to depict, for the first time, that the pulse of light was moving backward within the fiber.

Phew! There are animations at the University of Rochester link illustrating this. Rock on!



  1. Tod says:

    NOT too surprising, to me…
    Think about it, according to scientist, the “speed” is supposed to be constant, in a vacume, with all other motion at rest (as I understand it).

    Where, in the UNIVERSE, will you find some place “at rest”?

    Not on earth. Planet spinning and orbiting the sun.
    Not in the solar system. Everything is orbiting the sun, and the sun is speeding along at some ungodly speed.
    Not in the Galaxy. The Galaxy is orbiting the center (and probably a black hole) and, again, speeding along at some ungodly speed.
    Not in the Galatic Cluster. See above.
    Not in the universe. ALL of it is expanding.

    So.
    Where can space actually be “at rest”?

  2. Fabrizio Marana says:

    Great!

    If light travels backward in time it’s just a matter of ime before I can commit suicide by traveling back into time and kill my great-grandfather. (And put it on alt.suicide off course)

    Amazing that the fourth dimension seems 2-way after all!

    🙂

    Fabrizio

  3. rwilliams254 says:

    “So. Where can space actually be “at rest”? ”
    Rest = absolute zero. At absolute zero atoms and subatomic particles stop moving. In theory this can happen, but we haven’t found it yet. However, through math/physics, we can prove it’s out there.

    This is pretty cool. Yeah science!

  4. Gig says:

    Their “animations” have to be the single most boring thing I’ve ever seen on the net. And that says a lot.

  5. John Wofford says:

    So that means that we can have faster than light travel, but we can only back up?
    Some one, some day, wii develop a drug cocktail that will enable us common folks to Grok All this.

  6. Mr. H. Fusion says:

    The ultimate driving instruction: “go ahead, back-up”

  7. Milo says:

    This story should be balanced with a story on intelligent illumination.

  8. Mr. H. Fusion says:

    This story should be balanced with a story on intelligent illumination.
    Would that be like shining a light in George Bush’s ear so you could see a white spot on the opposite wall?

  9. John Wofford says:

    Mr. Fusion, I respectfully ask that you not tarnish the oh so lofty topic of light speed mechanics with the name of the man so often associated with thought processes occurring exponential orders of magnitude below light speed, even if in reverse.

  10. James, age 14 says:

    WOW! A light bulb that sucks light, instead of dispersing light. WHERE CAN I BUY ONE????!

  11. nescosmo says:

    WOW yes WE CAN, can’t you see the light! ask Obama. Is behind him again, and again, and again………


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