Scientists Discovered a New Kind of Light…Seriously

Here is a bit more information in terms of the technical jargon.  However, even a non physicist can appreciate this experiment and spotting:

Now, recent PhD graduate Kyle Ballantine and Professor Paul Eastham, both from Trinity College Dublin’s School of Physics, along with Professor John Donegan from CRANN, have demonstrated a new form of light where the angular momentum of each photon (a particle of visible light) takes only half of this value. This difference, though small, is profound.

What could this mean and what are your wildest ideas in regards to their experiment?  Could this be used in lasers or some other type of application or experiment?  maybe we don’t even want to know.

And in the below video they show a really cool new kind of light bulb from the evening news although it does not use this kind of light.

Check back for updates as they come in!

Image Credit: Jeff Keyzer via Flickr

thanks to phys.org for the great info

 



5 Comments

  1. Jason Ira Ui'Raghallaigh Reibold said:

    Articles like this are one step away from clickbait. This told me absolutely nothing and what the$#%&!@*does a “brand new type of lightbulb” have to do with the subject of the article? Post an article when you have something more than just “Hey guys! Scientists did some new science today and guess what, its a nee type of light. Speaking of new lights HERES A NEW LIGHTBULB!”

  2. Sunny Hise said:

    When one knows dispersion technology & is aware of Inversion technology, tuning beams to precision distancing is fun.!

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