Dr. Kamal Singh of IISER Mohali (left) and his PhD student Gopal Verma
used an indigenous experimental set-up to calculate the bulge in the
water particle due to the photon beam.
Does the momentum of light increase or decrease when it
passes through a material? This question, which formed the crux of a
debate between two German physicists in the early 20 Century finally
sees the answer recreated in a lab in Mohali.
Ever
since the scientists Hermann Minkowski and Max Abraham came up with
contradicting equations that both seemed to be supported by
contradicting experimental data, the ‘controversy’ has raged on without a
solution as equipment failed to be sensitive enough to detect the
light-induced tiny deformations at the interface between air and water.
However,
using an indigenous experimental set-up, researchers from the Indian
Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER), Mohali, have
achieved a breakthrough that shows that Minkowski was right — light does
gain momentum as it enters another medium.
The
“simple” setup involved shining a laser on a water drop to study the
chain of events. The Helium-Neon laser was incident at the Total
Internal Reflection — a critical angle where all the light is reflected,
like a mirror.
Described in the journal Physical Review Letters published recently,theprobe
laser produces high-contrast Newton’s ring (concentric circles of light
and dark) on the water drop. The modulation of these fringes allowed
the scientists to observe bulges in surface of heights lesser than 5
nano-metre precision.
On conducting
the experiment at angles close to TIR, the water surface was found to be
bent upwards due to the pressure exerted by the photon beam and was
spread to 100 times beyond the area of the pumped laser. The analysis
shows that the light particles actually gained momentum.
“For
the first time in history, our experiment validates the century old
Minkowski theory near Total Internal reflection…this novel and very
sensitive technique has wide applications and can be used to precisely
measure properties of light non-invasively,” says Kamal P. Singh, an
IISER scientist who co-authored the paper with his colleague Gopal
Verma.
Apart from solving a century-old
problem, the equipment designed can aide in developing better
biosensors, lab-on-chip devices, easily reconfigurable lenses and
molecular imaging tools.
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