Space Industry and Business News  
Science Team Shows Light Is Made Of Particles And Waves

light from the edge of time itself
by Staff Writers
Glassboro, NJ (SPX) Mar 14, 2007
Work completed by a visiting research professor at Rowan University, physics professors and a student from the institution shows that light is made of particles and waves, a finding that refutes a common belief held for about 80 years.

Shahriar S. Afshar, the visiting professor who is currently at Boston's Institute for Radiation-Induced Mass Studies (IRIMS), led a team, including Rowan physics professors Drs. Eduardo Flores and Ernst Knoesel and student Keith McDonald, that proved Afshar's original claims, which were based on a series of experiments he had conducted several years ago.

An article on the work titled "Paradox in Wave-Particle Duality" recently published in Foundations of Physics, a prestigious, refereed academic journal, supports Albert Einstein's long-debated belief that quantum physics is incomplete. For eight decades the scientific community generally had supported Niels Bohr's ideas commonly known as the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics.

In 1927, in his "Principle of Complementarity," he asserted that in any experiment light shows only one aspect at a time, either it behaves as a wave or as a particle. Einstein was deeply troubled by that principle, since he could not accept that any external measurement would prevent light to reveal its full dual nature, according to Afshar.

The fundamental problem, however, seemed to be that one has to destroy the photon in order to measure either aspects of it. Then, once destroyed, there is no light left to measure the other aspect.

"About 150 years ago, light was thought to behave solely as a wave similar to sound and water waves. In 1905, Einstein observed that light might also act as being made out of small particles. Since then physicists found it difficult understanding the full nature of light since in some situations it acts like a particle and in others like a wave," Flores said.

"This dual nature of light led to the insight that all fundamental physical objects include a wave and a particle aspect, even electrons, protons and students."

Afshar conducted his initial theoretical and experimental work at IRIMS, where he served the privately funded organization as a principal investigator. He later continued his work at the Harvard University Physics Department as a research scholar, where he was able to verify his initial findings before going to Rowan.

In 2004, Afshar claimed that he had devised an experiment that challenged Bohr's principle of complementarity. The Rowan team was formed to verify Afshar's claim at extremely low light intensity levels. Afshar, Flores and Knoesel conducted experiments at Rowan that validated Afshar's initial findings for single photons.

In this modified double-slit experiment, a laser beam hits a screen with two small pinholes. As a particle, light goes through one of the pinholes. Through a lens system, the light is then imaged onto two detectors, where a certain detector measures only the photons, which went through a particular pinhole.

In this way, Afshar verified the particle nature of light. As a wave, light goes through both pinholes and forms a so-called interference pattern of bright and dark fringes.

"Afshar's experiment consists of the clever idea of putting small absorbing wires at the exact position of the dark interference fringes, where you expect no light," Knoesel said.

"He then observed that the wires do not change the total light intensity, so there are really dark fringes at the position of the wires. That proves that light also behaves as a wave in the same experiment in which it behaves as a particle."

The findings of the Afshar experiment were published online on January 23 in the Foundations of Physics, an international journal devoted to the conceptual bases and fundamental theories of modern physics, biophysics and cosmology, with several distinguished Nobel laureates on its editorial board. The print version was published in the February 2007 edition and is now available in libraries throughout the world.

"The important new contribution is that light carries both wave and particle aspects at all times, and future experiments will further clarify the nature of each component." Afshar said.

Flores continued, "It is interesting to note that even after 80 years we can still gain a better understanding about the nature of light using refined measurement techniques and creative ideas and therefore are able add to the vast insights of former scientists."

Related Links
Rowan University
All about the technology of space and more
Understanding Time and Space
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Indonesia To Rehabilitate Failed Peatland Project From Suharto Era
Jakarta (AFP) March 11, 2007
The Indonesian government is planning to rehabilitate a sprawling peatland in Central Kalimantan which was converted to agriculture during the reign of former president Suharto causing widespread environmental damage, an official said Sunday. "We have approval, in principle, from the president to rehabilitate the 'One Million Hectare Peatland' but we still are awaiting the necessary presidential decree to start," Central Kalimantan governor Agustin Teras Narang told AFP.







  • Publish, Perish Attitudes Make Profs Balk At Online Publication
  • World Getting Ready To Change The Light Bulb
  • Hong Kong Internet Access Fully Restored
  • New Damage And Bad Weather Delay Asian Internet Repairs

  • Official Opening Of The Soyuz Launch Base Construction Site In French Guiana
  • Canadian Satellite Given Final Checks At Russian Launch Pad
  • First Ariane 5 Launch Of 2007 Finally Gets Away
  • United Launch Alliance Successfully Launches First USAF Atlas 5

  • Germans Urged To Give Foreign Travel A Rest To Curb Global Warming
  • Raytheon Team Proposes Single International Standard In ADS-B Pursuit
  • NASA Signs Defense Department Agreement
  • Lockheed Martin And FAA Reach Significant Milestone In Transformation Of Flight Services

  • QinetiQ Completes Urgent Satellite Communications System Order For MOD Helicopters
  • Harris Gets Follow-On Production Contract For Military Tactical Communications System
  • US Army Developing Better Access To Intelligence Data Through Distributed Common Ground System
  • General Dynamics Completes Milestone In Design Of US Navy Mobile User Objective System

  • Saab Space To Supply Antennas For New Generation Direct-To-Mobile Satellites
  • Virtual Reality For Virtual Eternity
  • Boeing Orbital Express to Demonstrate New On-Orbit Servicing Capability
  • Top 10 Materials Moments In History Announced

  • 30th Space Wing Welcomes New Commander
  • Joel Levine Named Mars Scout Program Scientist
  • Intelsat Names William Shernit President Of Intelsat General Subsidiary
  • Alan Stern Appointed To Lead Science Mission Directorate

  • CryoSat-2 On The Road To Recovery
  • Climate Change View Clearer With New Oceans Satellite
  • Space Scientists To Take The Pulse Of Planet Earth
  • Satellite Scientists Set To Descend On Hobart

  • New Receiver Board Gets All The Right Signals
  • Glonass Cheaper To Build Than GPS Says Putin
  • Raytheon To Pursue Air Force Upgrade For NextGen GPS Control Segment
  • ESA Award SSTL Contract To Build A Second GIOVE-A

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement