How To Build A Time Cloak With Mirrors - MIT Technology Review
How To Build A Time Cloak With Mirrors - MIT Technology Review
During the last two years, physicists have begun using exotic metamaterials
to create holes in time. The first time cloak lasted only for 100 nanoseconds
or so. But last month, researchers showed how to cloak data almost half of
the time. That’s an impressive improvement.
The basic idea behind time cloaking is simple. Imagine viewing a clock
illuminated by a laser. In ordinary circumstances, the light leaves the laser,
travels to the clock and reflects towards you, the observer. At each stage, the
speed of light is constant.
The trick behind time cloaking is to slow down light before it reaches the
clock creating a gap in which the movement of the clock is not illuminated.
You, the observer, cannot see what happens during this time.
Instead, you see the clock jump from one moment to a later time without
anything in between. “The distant observer therefore only sees a continuous
illumination, whilst the events that occurred during the dark period of the
cloak’s operation remain undetected,” says Lerma.
In effect, this process has created a hole in time during which events are
hidden.
That’s the theory. The practice is more involved. The enabling technologies
that have made this type of time cloaking possible are so-called
metamaterials that can slow down and speed up light. These are difficult
and complex to make.
But Lerma points out today that this kind of exotic stuff is not necessary.
Instead, he shows how to achieve time cloaking using a set of mirrors that
can be switched on or off. His idea is to use one set of mirrors to divert light
through an extra distance before it reaches the clock and another set of
mirrors that diverts light through a similar distance after it has hit the clock.
This extra distance essentially slows down the lights before it hits the clock.
After it has been reflected, the light can be speeded up by avoiding the
diversion so that it does not travel the extra distance.
This creates a gap during which any change the clock cannot be seen.
However, an observer watching the clock sees it jump in time without any
change in illumination.
Lerma’s device is interesting because it works for all frequencies of light that
the mirrors reflect. Metamaterials, on the other hand, generally work only at
specific frequencies. “”We have shown how to create an event cloak device
without the use of metamaterials, by a simple arrangement of switchable
transreflective mirrors,” says Lerma.
The new approach creates temporal holes that are equal to the time it takes
the light to travel the extra distance. So by making this distance arbitrarily
long, by bouncing the light back and forth off the Moon or for example, it
ought to be possible to make holes in time of almost any length.
That’s an impressively simple trick but it is not the first time that physicists
have shown that invisibility cloaks are actually much easier to make than
had been thought. A couple of months ago, physicists unveiled an invisibility
cloak that used mirrors rather than metamaterials to hide objects of almost
any size.
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