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posted by janrinok on Sunday September 11 2016, @08:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the don't-blow-these-at-home dept.

Most basic physics textbooks describe laser light in fairly simple terms: a beam travels directly from one point to another and, unless it strikes a mirror or other reflective surface, will continue traveling along an arrow-straight path, gradually expanding in size due to the wave nature of light. But these basic rules go out the window with high-intensity laser light.

Powerful laser beams, given the right conditions, will act as their own lenses and "self-focus" into a tighter, even more intense beam. University of Maryland physicists have discovered that these self-focused laser pulses also generate violent swirls of optical energy that strongly resemble smoke rings. In these donut-shaped light structures, known as "spatiotemporal optical vortices," the light energy flows through the inside of the ring and then loops back around the outside.

The vortices travel along with the laser pulse at the speed of light and control the energy flow around it. The newly discovered optical structures are described in the September 9, 2016 issue of the journal Physical Review X.

The researchers named the laser smoke rings "spatiotemporal optical vortices," or STOVs. The light structures are ubiquitous and easily created with any powerful laser, given the right conditions. The team strongly suspects that STOVs could explain decades' worth of anomalous results and unexplained effects in the field of high-intensity laser research.
...
"The smoke ring vortices we discovered may have even broader applications than previously known optical vortices, because they are time dynamic, meaning that they move along with the beam instead of remaining stationary," Jhajj added. "This means that the rings may be useful for manipulating particles moving near the speed of light."

The article cites the ability to manipulate light with STOVs as potentially expanding the amount of bandwidth our fiber optic lines can carry.


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 11 2016, @01:16PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 11 2016, @01:16PM (#400265)

    self-focusing happens as a strong laser traves *through a medium* (generally air for the various experiments, I assume). it's a nonlinear effect, and light is nonlinear only in the presence of matter.
    well... 2 gamma photons are supposed to be able to interact and generate stuff, but we're talking about light here, so much less energy per photon.

    by the way, I also felt the summary made it sound like self-focusing happens anywhere, and I found it annoying.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 11 2016, @03:51PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 11 2016, @03:51PM (#400303)

    i don't think "spatiotemporal" means what they think it means ...