Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Silver and silicon nitride nanolayers

http://phys.org/news/2013-10-material-visible-infinite-wavelength.html

Researchers from the FOM Institute AMOLF and the University of Pennsylvania have fabricated a material which gives visible light a nearly infinite wavelength. The new metamaterial is made by stacking silver and silicon nitride nanolayers. It may find applications in novel optical components or circuits and the design of more efficient leds. The work will appear on October 13th in Nature Photonics. 

http://www.nature.com/nphoton/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nphoton.2013.256.html

Experimental realization of an epsilon-near-zero metamaterial at visible wavelengths Nature Photonics

(2013) doi:10.1038/nphoton.2013.256
The phase velocity and of dictate how light propagates in a material. The phase velocity determines how the peaks and valleys of the wave move in the material, whereas the group velocity describes the transport of energy. According to Einstein's laws, the transport of energy of light can never be faster than the speed of light. Therefore the group velocity is limited. There are however no physical limitations to the phase velocity. When the phase velocity becomes zero, there is no movement of the peaks and valleys of the wave; when it is infinite the wavelength diverges to very large values. In nature however, no with such special properties exist.
Metamaterials
The research team now presents a metamaterial composed of a unit cell structure much smaller than the wavelength of light. By stacking nanoscale layers of silver and a new material is fabricated in which light 'feels' the optical properties of both layers.
The way light travels through matter is dependent on the material permittivity: the resistance of a material against the electric fields of light waves. Because the permittivity of silver is negative and that of silicon nitride is positive, the combined material has a permittivity which is effectively equal to zero. Therefore, it seems that the light experiences zero resistance, and propagates with an infinite phase velocity. The wavelength of the light is nearly infinite.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-10-material-visible-infinite-wavelength.html#jCp velocity and of dictate how light propagates in a material. The phase velocity determines how the peaks and valleys of the wave move in the material, whereas the group velocity describes the transport of energy. According to Einstein's laws, the transport of energy of light can never be faster than the speed of light. Therefore the group velocity is limited. There are however no physical limitations to the phase velocity. When the phase velocity becomes zero, there is no movement of the peaks and valleys of the wave; when it is infinite the wavelength diverges to very large values. In nature however, no with such special properties exist.
Metamaterials
The research team now presents a metamaterial composed of a unit cell structure much smaller than the wavelength of light. By stacking nanoscale layers of silver and a new material is fabricated in which light 'feels' the optical properties of both layers.
The way light travels through matter is dependent on the material permittivity: the resistance of a material against the electric fields of light waves. Because the permittivity of silver is negative and that of silicon nitride is positive, the combined material has a permittivity which is effectively equal to zero. Therefore, it seems that the light experiences zero resistance, and propagates with an infinite phase velocity. The wavelength of the light is nearly infinite.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-10-material-visible-infinite-wavelength.html#jCp
The phase velocity and of dictate how light propagates in a material. The phase velocity determines how the peaks and valleys of the wave move in the material, whereas the group velocity describes the transport of energy. According to Einstein's laws, the transport of energy of light can never be faster than the speed of light. Therefore the group velocity is limited. There are however no physical limitations to the phase velocity. When the phase velocity becomes zero, there is no movement of the peaks and valleys of the wave; when it is infinite the wavelength diverges to very large values. In nature however, no with such special properties exist.
Metamaterials
The research team now presents a metamaterial composed of a unit cell structure much smaller than the wavelength of light. By stacking nanoscale layers of silver and a new material is fabricated in which light 'feels' the optical properties of both layers.
The way light travels through matter is dependent on the material permittivity: the resistance of a material against the electric fields of light waves. Because the permittivity of silver is negative and that of silicon nitride is positive, the combined material has a permittivity which is effectively equal to zero. Therefore, it seems that the light experiences zero resistance, and propagates with an infinite phase velocity. The wavelength of the light is nearly infinite.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-10-material-visible-infinite-wavelength.html#jCp

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Amazing inquiry into notation of Velocity, Displacement and Time

I am sure that members of community of curious ladies and gentlemen shall be terrifically impressed by this amazing coincidence:


Աստված
AstvAծ
AStvAH

where S is displacement, t is time, v is velocity and handwritten graphical image of letter ծ is for number 8 which is letter H in the English Alphabet.  Note, that in common international notation in physics

S = t v .

Certainly there are other, more interesting regularities to note, but let us leave them for the Kids to ponder over.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Greetings related wtih Mr. Hig's/Higgs Particle

Special Greetings and bright congratulations to Prof. Higgs and Prof. Englert.

The notorious experimental confirmation of the theory on Independence Day: 4/7 in Geneva opened a new highway of understanding the reality and the notorious Nobel Prize well underlines this epic achievement. 

Physics Nobel Prize goes to 'God particle' scientists


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2013/10/08/peter-higgs-and-francois-englert-physics-nobel-prize/2941479/


The 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics has gone to Britain's Peter W. Higgs and Belgium's Francois Englert, the Nobel Committee announced in Stockholm on Tuesday.

They were jointly awarded the prize for their work on a theory that offers an explanation for how the fundamental particles of the Universe acquire mass.

Last year, the pair's work was confirmed after the discovery of the so-called Higgs particle — known also as the Higgs boson and the God particle — at a laboratory in Geneva.