Putting the Brakes on Light
Light travels 186,000 miles per second in a vacuum; in Lene Hau's lab, it ambles at 38 miles an hour
- By John P. Wiley, Jr.
- Smithsonian magazine, June 1999, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Let's go for broke here. Death and taxes have nothing on gravity. It is with us all the time and everywhere. (As I age, gravity seems to be pulling me into the ground with increasing vigor. It can't be true, can it?) Physicists speak of the gravitational constant. If you must know, the gravitational constant, known as Big G, is 6.67 x 10-8 cm3/g sec2. Little g is the strength of gravity at the earth's surface. Now hush. The point is that it's constant, at least until now. Today we have new ways of measuring the longest distances in the universe, using exploding stars as our ruler ticks. We are finding that instead of being slowed by the aggregate gravitational pull of all the galaxies, stars and dark matter behind them, the galaxies farthest away appear to be accelerating away from us.
Well, my fantasy is obvious. Phenomena that we believe exist only at astronomical scales can surprise us. Black holes objectify "big" and "strong." The small ones are the remains of massive stars that collapsed in on themselves. The big ones are the equivalent of millions of stars, sitting at the centers of galaxies like so many insatiable spiders. And yet Stephen (A Brief History of Time) Hawking once imagined black holes so small that were they floating by us in the park, even residing inside our homes, they might go undetected. So suppose antigravity can also exist on a small, let's say human, scale. How strong might it be? Oh, just enough for you or me to float up into the sky at will. Before everyone falls out of their chairs laughing, let's wait to see what the scientists come up with to explain the large-scale antigravity force. Let's see if they can duplicate the force in a laboratory, making little shuffleboard pucks on a tabletop rebound from each other in the same way that the north poles of two magnets brought together will repel each other. And let's all remember that electricity was once no more than a laboratory curiosity.
By John P. Wiley, Jr.
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