• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Time Reflections Of Electromagnetic Waves Have Been Demonstrated For The First Time

March 15, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

By switching the dielectric constant of a metamaterial, physicists have time-reflected electromagnetic waves being carried within it. The didn’t turn back time Cher-style, but the signal carried by the waves underwent both a reversal in order and frequency lengthening. Besides confirming a possibility theoreticians have been toying with for 60 years, the work could allow greater control over the way waves and matter interact. It could prove useful in photonics, the quest to replace electricity in information technology with light, allowing for an astonishing increase in speed.

Ordinary wave reflection off a suitable boundary is a familiar part of life. We witness it every day when we look in the mirror, hear it in echoes, and can watch ocean waves bounce off a breakwater if we want to see the process on a more graspable scale.

Advertisement

Time reflections, also known as temporal reflections, are something different, requiring an abrupt shift not just in the wave, but in the medium through which it is traveling. As occurred so often in the mid-20th century, theoretical physicists ran ahead of their experimental counterparts, discussing the workings of the phenomenon before it had been observed. In Nature Physics, a team at City University of New York announce they have caught up.

Time reflections produce a shift in frequency, which is relatively easy to understand, and a wave reversal in time, which is not. The first involves something like the Doppler shift, where wavelengths are stretched or contracted, most familiar in the redshift seen from distant galaxies. Light that is blue before the reflection becomes yellow, green light becomes red, and so on. Harder to get one’s head around is the way the end of a signal is reflected first, so that we hear the signal backwards, like old-style conspiracy theorists who thought they could detect satanic messages by spinning rock records the wrong way.

The phenomenon of time reflection is associated with time crystals, whose atoms form patterns that repeat in time as ordinary crystals do in space. The surprising discovery of examples of these objects has raised interest in related concepts. However, time reflection requires the properties of the medium to change at more than twice the frequency of the wave. The exceptionally high frequencies of visible light, let alone anything in the UV or X-ray part of the spectrum, make this a challenge, although it has been demonstrated in water waves.

“The key roadblock that prevented time reflections in previous studies was the belief that it would require large amounts of energy to create a temporal interface,” said Dr Gengyu Xu in a statement. “It is very difficult to change the properties of a medium quick enough, uniformly, and with enough contrast to time reflect electromagnetic signals because they oscillate very fast.”

figure showing the concept of time reflection versus spatial reflection

In a spatial reflection (a) we see our face reversed left to right. In a temporal reflection (b) we would see the back of our head because the wave order is reversed, and the colors would be changed thanks to frequency shifting. (C) Schematic of the experimental set up, with a control signal changing the medium through which a wave passes fast enough to induce time reflection. Image credit: Andrea Alu

The team turned to metamaterials, substances with properties never seen in nature.

“Our idea was to avoid changing the properties of the host material, and instead create a metamaterial in which additional elements can be abruptly added or subtracted through fast switches,” Xu said. 

The team confirmed their achievement by combining time-reflected and time-refracted versions of the same signal and observing the interference. 

The study is published in Nature Physics. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer-Guardiola in the dark over availability of Brazilian players
  2. Doctors scale rockslides, invoke gods to vaccinate Himalayan villages
  3. R. Kelly found guilty of racketeering in sex trafficking case
  4. Soccer-Rashford receives honorary doctorate from University of Manchester

Source Link: Time Reflections Of Electromagnetic Waves Have Been Demonstrated For The First Time

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • “One Of The Most Beautiful Experiments In Evolutionary Biology”: What The Peppered Moth Taught Us About Evolution
  • Why Do Microwaved Eggs Explode When You Bite Into Them?
  • First-Ever At-Home LSD Microdosing Trial For Depression Sees 60 Percent Improvement In Symptoms
  • People Are Just Learning What A Baby Turkey Is Called
  • Enceladus’s North Pole Is Leaking Heat, Indicating Its Ocean Is Ancient And Boosting Prospects For Life
  • Speaking Multiple Languages May Be A Secret Weapon Against The Ravages Of Old Age
  • The World’s Largest Monkey Roams The Forest In “Hordes” Of Over 800 Individuals
  • People Are Only Just Learning How CDs Play Music
  • Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Shows Evidence Of “Galactic Cosmic Ray” Processing. That’s Not Great News
  • We Finally Know How Chameleons’ Bulging Eyes Can Point In Different Directions
  • Blue Origin Mars Mission Scrubbed Due To “Cumulus Cloud Rule”. Why Can’t Rockets Fly Through Clouds?
  • Introducing The Patent Bay – How Sharing Innovation Can Help Build Sustainable Futures
  • Neanderthals Did Not Totally Vanish From Earth, They Became Part Of The Modern Human Population
  • Conference 101 With Pittcon: How To Get The Most Out Of A Science Conference
  • What Happened When A Kansas Family Lived With 2,055 Brown Recluse Spiders For Over 5 Years
  • Young People Are Now So Miserable That It Has Upset A Fundamental Pattern Of Life
  • We May Finally Have A Way To Tell Female Dinosaurs From Males, World’s Largest Spider Web Is Big Enough To Catch A Whale, And Much More This Week
  • This Month’s New Moon Will Be The Farthest From Earth For The Next 18 Years
  • Playing Music To Baby Mice Shapes Their Brain Development In A Sex-Specific Way
  • Ice XXI: Scientists Discover A New Form Of Ice Born At Room Temperature Under Intense Pressure
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version