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  2. Slow light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slow_light

    Slow light is a dramatic reduction in the group velocity of light, not the phase velocity. Slow light effects are not due to abnormally large refractive indices, as will be explained below. The simplest picture of light given by classical physics is of a wave or disturbance in the electromagnetic field.

  3. Lene Hau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lene_Hau

    Hau and her associates at Harvard University "have demonstrated exquisite control over light and matter in several experiments, but her experiment with 2 condensates is one of the most compelling". [11] In 2006 they successfully transferred a qubit from light to a matter wave and back into light, again using Bose–Einstein condensates.

  4. Zeeman slower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeeman_slower

    A Zeeman slower before its incorporation into a larger cold-atom experiment. In atomic physics, a Zeeman slower is a scientific instrument that is commonly used in atomic physics to slow and cool a beam of hot atoms to speeds of several meters per second and temperatures below a kelvin.

  5. A Slower Speed of Light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Slower_Speed_of_Light

    OpenRelativity is a toolkit designed for use with the proprietary Unity game engine. It was developed by MIT Game Lab during the development of A Slower Speed of Light. The toolkit allows for the accurate simulation of a 3D environment when light is slowed down. [7] It is hosted on GitHub and has been published under the permissive MIT license. [2]

  6. Sagnac effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagnac_effect

    When light propagates in fibre optic cable, the setup is effectively a combination of a Sagnac experiment and the Fizeau experiment. In glass the speed of light is slower than in vacuum, and the optical cable is the moving medium. In that case the relativistic velocity addition rule applies.

  7. Refractometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refractometer

    As light passes through the liquid from the air it will slow down and create a ‘bending’ illusion, the severity of the ‘bend’ will depend on the amount of substance dissolved in the liquid. For example, the amount of sugar in a glass of water.

  8. One-way speed of light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-way_speed_of_light

    Experiments that attempt to directly probe the one-way speed of light independent of synchronization have been proposed, but none have succeeded in doing so. [3] Those experiments directly establish that synchronization with slow clock-transport is equivalent to Einstein synchronization, which is an important feature of special relativity.

  9. Neutron moderator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_moderator

    The newly released fast neutrons, moving at roughly 10% of the speed of light, must be slowed down or "moderated", typically to speeds of a few kilometres per second, if they are to be likely to cause further fission in neighbouring 235 U nuclei and hence continue the chain reaction. This speed occurs at temperatures in the few hundred Celsius ...