Why is light slower in glass? - Sixty Symbols

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2013
  • Professor Merrifield largely "uncut" discussing refraction... Professor Moriarty on the same subject: • More rambling on Refra...
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    This project features scientists from The University of Nottingham
    www.nottingham.ac.uk/physics/i...
    Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran
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    Mike Merrifield tweets at / profmike_m
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Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @tomdrowry
    @tomdrowry Před 7 lety +577

    Professor Moriaty , what a great name.

    • @SiddharthSharma15
      @SiddharthSharma15 Před 7 lety +15

      i was thinking the exact same thing.

    • @fullyawakened
      @fullyawakened Před 7 lety +12

      Thomas Drowry They should name a douche after him. Garbage human being

    • @desertfox2020
      @desertfox2020 Před 7 lety +1

      Why is that?

    • @anthropomorphousdodecahedr6504
      @anthropomorphousdodecahedr6504 Před 7 lety

      Would you care for an elaboration?

    • @hsterts
      @hsterts Před 6 lety +6

      Hilmar Zonneveld I always love myself some Sherlock Holmes. Reading the Hound of Baskerville right now!

  • @Xasperato
    @Xasperato Před 8 lety +554

    All I wanted to know is why light traveled a bit slower through a medium such as glass, but now I find myself with all these questions about quantum physics and the nature of fundamental reality, and it's a bloody mess.

    • @charliedobbie8916
      @charliedobbie8916 Před 8 lety +15

      A certain Ghork Yes, that sounds about right!

    • @cleebe823
      @cleebe823 Před 8 lety +28

      +A certain Ghork you cant just know one thing, you need prior knowledge, its the same with everything, i just want to take the car to the shop, now i need to learn to drive.

    • @mrembeh1848
      @mrembeh1848 Před 8 lety +13

      +A certain Ghork That is how physics works. that is what makes it fascinating :D

    • @scottwheeler1641
      @scottwheeler1641 Před 7 lety +6

      A certain Ghork But light travels a lot slower through glass! I don't believe Atoms exist, just electro magnetic waves. I don't think anybody knows why light is slower through glass or what a magnet is!

    • @hanspeterfake3130
      @hanspeterfake3130 Před 7 lety +7

      +A certain Ghork You have no idea how deep your comment is… I'm actually thinking about adding this as a citation to my physics phd thesis :)

  • @davecrupel2817
    @davecrupel2817 Před 9 lety +56

    i love how he got quiet at "traveling faster than the speed of light" xD

    • @yigitsezer6696
      @yigitsezer6696 Před 4 lety +5

      thats kind of a taboo

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Před rokem

      @@yigitsezer6696 yet it is in Nature and has been replicated. They just don't want to have to explain how it doesn't break causality. I don't blame them lol

  • @benmacdonald4702
    @benmacdonald4702 Před 5 lety +21

    I love the videos where Prof. Merrifield just gets let loose on a problem, gives a bunch of different points of view and disproves them while finally leading to our best idea of what's going on yet still leaving us something to think about.

  • @ReedCBowman
    @ReedCBowman Před 7 lety +763

    "Barry the beam of light"?? Surely his name should be Ray!

  • @wonderpookie
    @wonderpookie Před 4 lety +7

    This is one of my favourite videos on YT, of all time.
    A huge thank you to all involved in its making.

  • @nonexistence5135
    @nonexistence5135 Před 6 lety +10

    This topic is much more interesting than I thought it would be. This really shows that the more questions you have answered, the more questions you are left with

  • @A3Kr0n
    @A3Kr0n Před 10 lety +5

    I'm so glad we get to see Brady more often. It really improves the videos.

  • @rikschaaf
    @rikschaaf Před 7 lety +178

    Weirdly enough, that last explanation makes the most sense

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 4 lety +10

      @Billy Willy I think he was referring to the 'Polariton' explanation.

    • @thefinder8087
      @thefinder8087 Před 4 lety +4

      @@DANGJOS I don't know, to me both quantum mechanical explanations make more sense than the Newtonian one. It didn't seem like he ever said why having all the other fields around slows light, just that it does.

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 4 lety +3

      @@thefinder8087 Pretty sure the reemitted EM waves are phase shifted, and this combines to form a slower wave. Also, the path integral explanation doesn't really have an intuitive feel for why it travels slower.

  • @ostheer
    @ostheer Před 8 lety +165

    Thank you for this very informational video.

    • @sixtysymbols
      @sixtysymbols  Před 8 lety +21

      Mathijs Verhaegh you are welcome

    • @jonathanolson772
      @jonathanolson772 Před 8 lety +4

      +Mathijs Verhaegh Yes! This is probably the best description of what actually happens on the quantum level that I have found so far. This is a great video.

    • @G4mm4G0bl1n
      @G4mm4G0bl1n Před 7 lety

      The shown material is completly wrong and missunderstood from the original postulation from Albert Einstein. The Light becomes not slower. The radiant from the longitude movement will be longer. So the Light becomes not slower, the way for the Light becomes longer!
      Lightspeed is constance and fix! Thats the first rule of E=mc². Baddest fail I ever seen and what is he, a Professor? Where is the Vending Machine for 25¢ to get the title?

    • @G4mm4G0bl1n
      @G4mm4G0bl1n Před 7 lety

      Joel White
      The Explanations of him are useless complicated. I can show you a picture which explains all what he said over the complete video and more.

    • @god_damn9661
      @god_damn9661 Před 7 lety +4

      lol...i bet u are more confused now and didnt understand a sh!t!!!

  • @TheZetr0
    @TheZetr0 Před 9 lety +3

    I really am enjoying this subscription!
    I just want to say a huge thanks to all those involved with their time and efforts, its amazing to have three models that for the most part describe the photon affect when effected by a medium.
    To be fair this is fundamental and inspirational work which I am thoroughly enjoying to watch and listen.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @shok24199
    @shok24199 Před 6 lety +9

    I think Professor Merrifield has created his own physical constant. 3.0x10^8 words per second, in a monologue.

  • @FatManLaughing
    @FatManLaughing Před 7 lety +8

    This is one of the best explanations I've ever heard on the subject.. And definitely the clearest of them.

  • @rynieryarom4277
    @rynieryarom4277 Před 5 lety +3

    I watch and rewatch these videos over years and still can figure it out

  • @flurng
    @flurng Před 10 lety

    I do enjoy all of your videos, but I think I prefer videos of this type; un-edited, with just one person presenting a concept, start to finish, rather than jumping back and forth between two people. I find it much easier to follow & thus understand in this format. Well done & keep up the good work!

  • @BruceSeesall
    @BruceSeesall Před 6 lety

    Very interesting thank you for sharing it. Helped me very much.

  • @frabuleuse
    @frabuleuse Před 10 lety +13

    What a lovely conversation! I especially like the fact that Prof. Merrifield explains how physicists work with models trying to explain reality.
    Did you already made a video about what a model is? I would love to hear all the professors explanations on how we go from reality to a model and than use the model to make assumptions that we can verify or not...

    • @saltybits9954
      @saltybits9954 Před rokem

      They cant answer real questions. Its not written down for them.

  • @TrabberShir
    @TrabberShir Před 8 lety +22

    best part of this video in my opinion is at 16:04 as you try to imagine Brady's face before vocalizing his question.

  • @MarcCastellsBallesta
    @MarcCastellsBallesta Před 5 lety +1

    I already am a physicist but I couldn't have answered the question without having to revisit many class notes and books.
    I wish one day I can explain stuff like he did.
    What's the English expression... *hats off to you!*

  • @NeonTyrant
    @NeonTyrant Před 7 lety

    What a fantastic lecturer! Thanks Prof Merrifield.

  • @adamunruh2931
    @adamunruh2931 Před 8 lety +4

    Very interesting. First time I've grasped quantum vs classical models

  • @PlasmaFuzer
    @PlasmaFuzer Před 9 lety +10

    Not sure if you have done one, but a very interesting video you could do, which is related to this one and is briefly touched on (not by name), would be on Cherenkov radiation. Granted it is much more complicated to explain properly, however I have always found it to be quite extraordinary that it is possible to exceed the speed of light (phase velocity; in a medium) without breaking the laws of physics. Despite there being other videos on the subject, I think the public could only benefit by input from your channel.

    • @jackgude3969
      @jackgude3969 Před 8 měsíci

      8 years later, hopefully a productive comment for future readers, I ended up here while going down the rabbit-hole of Cherenkov radiation. I agree with the sentiment that the physics is truly awesome.
      I think it makes a lot of sense when you consider the momentum of an electron relative to a photon. It's really only because these charged particles have mass that they're able to temporarily continue at some speed faster than light in a medium. The velocity graph of the charged particle is continuous but decreasing through the material. Analogous to a ball through a vacuum suddenly encountering air and being slowed by friction, generating heat. The electrons move at 90-something% of the speed of light through a vacuum until they hit a medium and are slowed by the interaction, generating light. (which is, as you said, much more complicated than simple friction, or the classical photon interactions described in this video)
      Like the professor said, photons are weird. They're massless but still have momentum and don't seem to experience time. I think classically, you can think of it similarly, with a photon velocity graph being continuous but decreasing much more sharply in the case of photons than electrons as soon as you hit the medium, because most photons simply don't have anywhere near the momentum of a massive particle moving at close to the speed of light. Velocity drops so sharply that, depending on the scale, the photon velocity graph would appear discontinuous where it enters and exits the medium. This classical model doesn't really explain why the photon would speed back up upon exiting the material though.

  • @shabe99
    @shabe99 Před 3 lety

    Coming back to this now 8 years later, i've changed degree paths a couple times and i'm about to finish my physics degree. And i can say with certainty that this is one of those very instructive concepts that shows why physicists bother with all this damn math(s). The balance of classical vs quantum and different types of velocities for waves, phases, blah, blah, etc are so obtuse and hard to understand independent from the math(s). Which is why we take the time to walk through the math(s) all the way from algebra and trigonometry to optics, E&M, Classical and Quantum Mechanics and beyond: it makes so much more sense in that framework.
    And I also have a new appreciation for Prof Merrifield's ability to explain this stuff. It's like he just casually sat down and tried to explain his music to a bunch of deaf people without any musical notation to help, and he pulls it off splendidly.

  • @padsoneil
    @padsoneil Před 10 lety

    I was surprised to discover that the "polariton" description was simplest to follow and understand. It also gave me a greater insight into the other descriptions which, beforehand seemed messy & unsatisfying. That was cool - many thanks! :-)

  • @alaaakkoush1135
    @alaaakkoush1135 Před 9 lety +54

    we hope you can make a video about Polaritons.

  • @quintonwilson8565
    @quintonwilson8565 Před 3 lety +3

    In all three of his explanations, I don't understand how the photon wave comes out of the glass going the original speed before entering the glass. So the original photon wave "energy/speed" was never even affected by the lattice/electrons waves of the glass it passed through? In the classical explanation, he even says the photon wave loses energy because some of it goes to microvibrations of atoms, doesn't the photon somehow have to regain this lost energy?

    • @SimulatingPhysics
      @SimulatingPhysics Před 3 lety +2

      Photons have a fixed energy, equal to E = h*f where h is the planck constant and f the frequency. The frequency of the photon never changes, neither does its energy. What happens is when the light (bunch of photons) enters in the material, it can absorb an amount of them. So the energy change of the intensity of light is due the loss of photons, not about the change of the energy of the individual photons.

    • @quintonwilson8565
      @quintonwilson8565 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SimulatingPhysics I'm talking speed, not flux.

    • @SimulatingPhysics
      @SimulatingPhysics Před 3 lety +2

      @@quintonwilson8565 Photon speed is always the same too. The apparent slowdown is because the emitted photons by the atoms of the material destructively interfere with incident ones in the ends of their wavefronts so the photons appear to travel at lower speed, but they are not. When the photons get out of the material they don't interfere anymore and the slow down effect dissapear.

    • @peterisawesomeplease
      @peterisawesomeplease Před 3 lety

      Yea I am confused too. Like if you sent a single photo through glass you would think that jiggling the elections in the glass would cause a loss of energy. So you would expect that the photo would be remitted at a lower frequency. But of course that does not happen. I think it must have something to do with the how the double slit experiment works though. Like it looks like there is interference without actually giving up any heat or something to the glass.

  • @alexandre6881
    @alexandre6881 Před 3 lety

    awesome interview

  • @vegarsc
    @vegarsc Před 8 lety

    As always, great video! Are those very peculiar circumstances Merrifield talks about after about 10 minutes, by any chance produced using negative index materials?

  • @Hack3r91
    @Hack3r91 Před 9 lety +3

    I may be wrong but, isn't that kind of (classical) scattering a dipole radiation? Light would be re emitted in some distribution which is not keeping track of the direction that the original light had.

  • @TimbavatiLion
    @TimbavatiLion Před 8 lety +51

    I found the last model to be the easiest to understand. Photons becoming Polaritons, no longer behaving like photons, is not as mind-bending as a photon being everywhere at once :)

    • @ahmedshinwari
      @ahmedshinwari Před 6 lety +31

      I read it over the internet that "For every complex problem, there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

    • @cretaceoussteve3527
      @cretaceoussteve3527 Před 5 lety +4

      Sure, but remember that this Polariton thing is just a model, a mathematical symbol... which is also true of a photon. Quantum theory shows that in any measurable sense, particles that are small enough to be subatomic move according to probability waves. So in fact the term "particle" is misleading, but it's very difficult for us to wrap our minds around the idea of the universe and all its contents including our own bodies and brains as consisting of probabilistic fields of "energy", whatever that is...

    • @michalkacko4408
      @michalkacko4408 Před 4 lety +1

      You think that is mind-bending? Cause you are also everywhere at once.. but just a little bit :D

    • @randomnobody660
      @randomnobody660 Před 4 lety

      @@cretaceoussteve3527 here's a simple solution (to having to wrap our minds around quantum physics): don't. How physicists model reality has no bearing on how reality actually is, as explained by both the prof and you just earlier in your comment.
      I do hope we get a simpler way to interpret these models though.

    • @Robin.Tussin
      @Robin.Tussin Před 2 lety

      @@michalkacko4408 How can you be? Do you feel, "everywhere at once"?..
      Isn't it self-evidently the case that you're, not, everywhere at once? Aren't your components obviously collapsed into a hard and immutable probability matrix that is the being of you, at the sub-atomic level?
      If that's so then surely, you are, where you are - and, by that token, where you can possibly be, as that matrix, has always been strictly limited to being wherever it was that your own matrix determined you should most probably be, in the next infinitesimal moment of time - based on, where your matrix actually was, in the previous infinitesimal moment of time, ago?

  • @olevik2005
    @olevik2005 Před 3 lety

    Prof. Merrifield is definitely my favourite with Prof. Moriarty a close second I hope they live forever!

  • @titaniumdiveknife
    @titaniumdiveknife Před 8 lety

    I love the serious tone of these special two vidoes. All of Brady's sixty symbols should be like this. Serious.

  • @ecyor0
    @ecyor0 Před 10 lety +18

    Time to start using 'Polariton' in sci-fi stories :3

  • @rogerwilco2
    @rogerwilco2 Před 10 lety +3

    I clicked a like on this video before even watching it. With this subject I just knew it was going to be good.

  • @skrame01
    @skrame01 Před 8 lety

    I like the more educational/serious attempts at explanation and teaching / understanding on your channel. Too much entertainment is fun but distracting if you want to actually learn things, I'd rather have useful content. I'd love to see this style of interview/explanation applied to discussions dedicated to the explanation and understanding of advanced physics equations and maths! I'm sure there's a market for something like this, all technically educated people and enthusiasts who would appreciate and are interested in deeper understanding of the actual maths and their implications for a variety of reasons.

  • @robertelessar
    @robertelessar Před 3 lety +1

    The description of the quantum interactions and summations of the light beam traveling through a medium and slowing down reminds me just a little of the interactions of particles with the Higgs field generating mass.

  • @wbeaty
    @wbeaty Před 8 lety +18

    Excellent video! Especially excellent because it "debunks" the common (and wrong) explanations which are offered on many other websites.
    Oddly enough, Reddit gets it right too. Their science moderators pro-actively delete the highly-upvoted wrong explanations which Merrifield also debunks.

  • @sixtysymbols
    @sixtysymbols  Před 10 lety +7

    soon I hope - been a bit busy here!

    •  Před 3 lety +1

      Ah, ok then...

    • @avantesma1
      @avantesma1 Před 2 lety

      @ Some reeeal busy 8 years, those must've been.

  • @Mediumdave1983
    @Mediumdave1983 Před 4 lety

    Prof. Merrifield is (though among a field of greats!) my favourite Sixty Symbols professor :)

  • @allsortsofinterests1
    @allsortsofinterests1 Před 10 lety

    Could you tie this discussion into the related topic of surface plasmon resonance? I think it would help further describe the interactions involved.

  • @bezveze8047
    @bezveze8047 Před 6 lety +7

    There is a little math error at 1:38.
    Light travels 40% *faster in vacuum than it does in glass*
    The reverse with same percentage is not true though.
    In glass, the speed is 1 - 1/1.4 = 29% slower than in vacuum
    Percentages man :P

  • @saiprasadrm97
    @saiprasadrm97 Před 9 lety +38

    Did he make a mistake? I think he meant 40% faster in vacuum, not 40% slower in glass (ya, they aren't the same).
    150 is 50% more than 100 but 100 is only 33.3% lesser than 150.
    Tell me if I am wrong.

    • @TLJGames
      @TLJGames Před 9 lety +12

      You are right - he was just roughly estimating I guess.

    • @Lamnom
      @Lamnom Před 9 lety +7

      well, only if you consider 150 as 100%. If you keep value of 100 as 100%. Then 100 is still 50% lesser than 150...

    • @michaelmjh23
      @michaelmjh23 Před 9 lety

      Lamnom :D

    • @Crazy_Diamond_75
      @Crazy_Diamond_75 Před 9 lety +8

      When you say something is 40% smaller, you are saying that you divide by 1.4 to achieve your result. For example, 10 is 40% lower than 14 -> 14 / 1.4 is 10. 14 is 40% larger than 10 -> 10 * 1.4 = 14.

    • @Lamnom
      @Lamnom Před 9 lety +10

      so 71,43 is 40% less than 100??? how did you come to this conclusion. by what logic?something is 40% less, it means it's -40% of the original value. If 100 is original value, then 40% less is 60. How did you come to "divide by 1,4"? makes no sense? The only way I can see how would you come to this, is that you thought that if to add 40% you need to multiply by 1,4, then to take 40% you need to divide by 1,4 (???) No.

  • @greensasque
    @greensasque Před 10 lety

    Brilliant interview!

  • @AgnostosGnostos
    @AgnostosGnostos Před 4 lety +2

    There are different kinds of glasses. For example the common glass from silicon that is used in cheap glass bottles is less dense than the lead glass that is used in expensive crystal bottles.
    Different glasses have different refractive index and that is very useful in optics. In microscopes, telescopes or the common camera lens of your smartphones or mirrorless camera.

  • @EdM66410
    @EdM66410 Před 5 lety +8

    8:40 funny hearing words used how they're supposed to be used.

  • @DarkNemesis25
    @DarkNemesis25 Před 8 lety +3

    so what is so fundamentally different about light turning into a polariton in glass vs air... at what point does the light fail to gain mass through a medium? is it not a binary question or does it gain infinitesimally small amounts of mass through every medium

    • @jasonslade6259
      @jasonslade6259 Před 8 lety +2

      +DarkNemesis25 I think that you could describe a photon in air as a Polariton but the mass of the Polariton that is created depends on the medium that it is passing though.
      The density of air is so much less than the density of glass that the resulting Air-Polariton would be nearly indistinguishable from a normal vacuum photon. The Glass-Polariton would be on the order of 2500x heavier.

  • @SQuark
    @SQuark Před 10 lety +1

    This video is really awesome, I really appreciate these being posted. Thanks Brady. I learnt something, today and every day!

  • @mikeatyouttube
    @mikeatyouttube Před 6 lety

    It was only briefly mentioned at the end of the video, but not much is said about the fact that light exiting the glass immediately speeds up again. Over what distance does this acceleration take place? And, for that matter, when the light enters the glass, how quickly and over what distance does it slow down? Presumably you could do an experiment to measure the slow down and speed up transition by passing light through extremely thin pieces of glass. At some very thin thickness of glass the light wont have slowed to the equilibrium speed (the speed of light in a thick piece of glass) before it has to speed up again as it exits this thin piece of glass.

  • @lupus7194
    @lupus7194 Před 7 lety +7

    I vaguely remember a result which I think comes from the Maxwell theory - the speed of light is the square root of (permeability/permittivity) of space. Could the slow down in light speed also be explained as being due to changes in these electrical and magnetic properties within a solid.

    • @G4mm4G0bl1n
      @G4mm4G0bl1n Před 7 lety

      pssst....
      Square and negate square this digit! ;)
      3,1622776601683793319988935444327^ 2 =
      3,1622776601683793319988935444327^-2 =
      Its so bad. Im really the only Once which understands this complete? I feeling like Nikola Tesla. A man far away from his centurie.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 7 lety +1

      G4mm4G0bl1n​
      Ich kann dich beruhigen: Du bist nicht der einzige, der das versteht.
      Allerdings verstehe ich nicht, was daran so schwierig zu verstehen ist.
      √(10)² = 10.
      √(10)⁻¹=0,1. Oder anders gesagt: 10^(1/2)^(-2)=10^(-2/2)=10^(-1).
      Ich persönlich finde das eher banal, und auch gar nicht relevant für Maxwells Gleichungen.
      +lupus
      I think so, but that wouldn't tell us what makes these values different in glass or water, just what these values are.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 7 lety

      G4mm4G0bl1n Du bist wahrscheinlich auch der einzige Mensch der Welt, der weiß, was ein „Planck Paket“ sein soll.

    • @colemarc
      @colemarc Před 7 lety +3

      Sure, but the Maxwell theory says nothing about what is the source of permeability and permittivity, it just postulates that each medium (even vacuum) somehow can be characterized by these two parameters.
      If I am not mistaken, Prof. Merrifield tries to explain that, from a classical point of view, the wave front travels through the glass at velocity c (speed of light in vacuum) but the material emits another wave in the same direction that somehow is just so that when superposed it results in a delayed version of the original.

    • @amineaboutalib
      @amineaboutalib Před 6 lety +1

      G4mm4G0bl1n /r/Iamverysmart

  • @waltermeerschaert
    @waltermeerschaert Před 8 lety +3

    I have a question. Does the density of space make an appreciable difference in the speed of light? is space considered a medium, as opposed to vacuum? there are theoretically particles coming into existence all the time, and then disappearing. wouldn't their mass change the speed of light? it might be small but we are talking up to 15 billion light years.

    • @amineaboutalib
      @amineaboutalib Před 6 lety

      Wally Meerschaert but I guess they take the ratio in calculations?

    • @dhvsheabdh
      @dhvsheabdh Před 6 lety

      This process happens everywhere though uncontrollably, and it linearly affects every instance, so how could you tell?

    • @omikronweapon
      @omikronweapon Před 4 lety

      the question lacks a fundamental variable. What constitutes "an appreciable difference"?
      If the difference is small, it will always be proportionally small, wouldn't it? Even if it's, say, (just making up a random number) one-thousand years, it would be over HUGE distances. Is that appreciable? Are we even capable of determining that accurately over such distances? A tiny miscalculation or unforeseen phenomenon would through it out of wack. With no way of confirming it.

  • @user-by7wy5hh5i
    @user-by7wy5hh5i Před 4 lety

    It is incredibly interesting, thank you and professor for the video:)

  • @kashmirha
    @kashmirha Před 4 měsíci

    Prof. Merrifield looks such a nice guy, humble, smart, diligent, somehow sensitive, reflective, king. He could be a great teacher.

  • @lezbriddon
    @lezbriddon Před 7 lety +26

    i'm a bit thick but... if they go slower through glass, then they lose momentum, but when they exit, how do they speed back up......

    • @bentoth9555
      @bentoth9555 Před 7 lety +12

      From my understanding of it, that's right. The equation for how much energy it takes to accelerate something is e=0.5M(V^2). Having no mass a photon would zero out the entire equation, meaning they don't have to have any energy added to accelerate to C.

    • @kenseto9266
      @kenseto9266 Před 7 lety +6

      Because light is being transmitted by a structured aether. Inside the glass the aether is more curved and thus light goes through the glass at a slower speed. When light exists the glass it is being transmitted by a less curved aether and thus it speeds up again.

    • @Toni999985
      @Toni999985 Před 7 lety +3

      The wavelength and frequency change when it slows down and vice versa. That's where the change happens

    • @IEVISCERATEU
      @IEVISCERATEU Před 7 lety +6

      You can think of the photon as imparting some of it's momentum on the particles in the glass and then recollecting that momentum (being pushed) as it leaves the glass. That's just an analogue though we need quantum mechanics to properly describe what's happening.

    • @fullyawakened
      @fullyawakened Před 7 lety +19

      They don't require energy to speed back up. Photons always travel at C as C is the default speed of anything that does not interact with the Higgs field. It's a bit counterintuitive that we should start at the fastest speed possible and require some kind of interference to slow down or stop but that is the way it actually is. If matter did not interact with the Higgs field then everything would travel at the default speed of existence, C.

  • @jasdeepyou
    @jasdeepyou Před 9 lety +23

    So if I find a medium in which the speed of light is really slow and it is transparent like glass. I take a huge block of that material and do something on one side of it and then quickly run to the other side faster than the speed of light in that medium, so on reaching the other side will I be seeing the past?

    • @katiebennie9245
      @katiebennie9245 Před 8 lety +6

      +Jasdeep Singh No. If you are not talking about c then time isn't compressed the same way. You would just be seeing the light coming towards you slowly. You would never be about to see into the past because you haven't gone beyond the speed of light c.

    • @anitatromp6295
      @anitatromp6295 Před 7 lety +18

      Technically you will. Just like the light you are seeing from Andromeda is technically its light from the past. Just like in a photograph all the objects in the distance is their photons from a different time "the past" than the objects in the foreground.

    • @jcxmej
      @jcxmej Před 7 lety +6

      You cant go faster than light but yea reach the other side faster than the light travelling in the thick medium. You see the light that you had sent some while ago.

    • @tanc94
      @tanc94 Před 7 lety +2

      pff. would be much cooler if you find a material to see the future! :P

    • @jxshannon2
      @jxshannon2 Před 6 lety +6

      Actually, you're always seeing the past. And looking in a mirror, you see yourself in the past. Albeit a very recent past.

  • @ozzzer
    @ozzzer Před 4 lety

    One this i don't quite get, as the light enters the glass, it imposes a wave which 'counter balances' it. What does this mean exactly? Does this mean the two waves are out of phase? Transmitting energy in opposite directions?
    And even in this case, i always thought when waves superpose (which i'm guessing they do, in the resultant wave), doesn't this mean you sum the displacements, not the velocities, meaning the velocity is the same but the amplitude or frequency of the wave has changed? But after saying this i realize that, if the frequency has reduced then according to c = wavelength * frequency, then c would decrease as a result of frequency decreasing. Please elaborate on his, thanks!

  • @inox1ck
    @inox1ck Před 6 lety

    I' ve read that group velocity and phase velocity can be slower or greater than c, but signal velocity which is cause and effect can't. The interesting thing is the signal velocity through a medium is slower than c, if I understand this right.
    Also it seems there is a superposition of waves that cancel out so that no amplitude can overtake the front wave. There must be some fractions that do not cancel out completely and get to the other side exactly at c.

  • @ulilulable
    @ulilulable Před 10 lety +6

    "How'd you expect me to edit this?" :D

  • @the_real_vdegenne
    @the_real_vdegenne Před 7 lety +114

    I wear glasses from my birth, are you telling me i've been sort of living in the past all that time ? i am 28 y.o now

    • @shuriken188
      @shuriken188 Před 7 lety +27

      We're all living somewhat in the past, the light has to travel through air, the lens of your eye, and the fluid inside your eye. Then the signals have to travel along your nerves much slower than light before reaching your brain to be processed. By the time this has all happened, extremely little time has passed, even if you have a thin layer of glass in front of your eye.

    • @the_real_vdegenne
      @the_real_vdegenne Před 7 lety +2

      sure. I was just joking, that is why when we look the bright stars in a clear night sky we somehow visualize what the past looked like. But who cares, there is just Present anyways

    • @The_Real_Indiana_Joe
      @The_Real_Indiana_Joe Před 6 lety +7

      Bet that was painful for mom.

    • @carultch
      @carultch Před 6 lety +4

      Even the speed of light in glass, as slow as it is (40% slower than light in empty space), is fast enough that the time it takes to pass that third of a centimeter through glasses, is insignificant for most human time scales. Human reaction time is about a tenth to a third of a second.
      If you are looking at something that is 10 meters away through glasses that are 3 mm thick (1.4 refractive index assumed), the light spends 33.333 nanoseconds in the air and 14 picoseconds in the glasses. That's a total of 33.3357 nanoseconds to get from the object to your eye. (ignoring significant digits in this calculation)

    • @EdMcF1
      @EdMcF1 Před 5 lety

      Perhaps you have aged 40% slower...

  • @herculesgixxer
    @herculesgixxer Před 8 lety

    wow amazing video. for someone who works in optics industry this is simply amazing

  • @AdityaKumar-ij5ok
    @AdityaKumar-ij5ok Před 5 lety

    13:00 does every possible path also include going back to the interface from the photon started?

  • @wcsxwcsx
    @wcsxwcsx Před 6 lety +6

    Does anyone remember a science fiction short story of many decades ago that dealt with this? Panes of glass were created called "slow glass" where light took years to pass through. People would buy the panes so they could view the past as the light finally came out.

  • @TheZooman22
    @TheZooman22 Před 9 lety +3

    OK, so the speed of light c is a constant 299,792,458 ms. The velocity doesn't really change, does it? Just the time it takes to navigate, though stuff.

  • @aaronsmith6632
    @aaronsmith6632 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video, thank you so much!

  • @jcfreak73
    @jcfreak73 Před 10 lety

    Please tell me you'll do a follow-up (or stand alone) video on just the polaritron (sp?)! That sounds so fascinating.

  • @Gryffster
    @Gryffster Před 10 lety +44

    Atlas Of Creation? WTF????

    •  Před 6 lety

      Gryffster i hope that book is there just for those moments of fun...

    • @veronicagorosito187
      @veronicagorosito187 Před 6 lety

      It seems that fear of death reaches not only average people, but also physics?

    • @CntRational
      @CntRational Před 5 lety +3

      Late response, but he talked about it in another video. He got sent the book by some creationist group. It's a thing they do, apparently.

    • @UNRELATIVE
      @UNRELATIVE Před 5 lety

      Yeah, I had to look this up...

  • @vinayseth1114
    @vinayseth1114 Před 8 lety +89

    1:42 - No that's not a reduction by 40 percent but 28.57 percent lol !

    • @NSA720
      @NSA720 Před 8 lety +62

      Yes, I was thinking this. One has to be careful with percentages. 1.4:1 means It travels 40% faster in a vacuum compared to glass, but 1:1.4 means about 29 percent slower in glass compared to a vacuum.

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 8 lety +2

      +Nick Allen Didn't think of it that way thanks

    • @yusuf1597
      @yusuf1597 Před 8 lety

      I don't get it isn't 1:1.4 the same as 1.4:1?

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 8 lety

      Pedro Numerically no, but depending on how you look at it, they are the same

    • @stensoft
      @stensoft Před 7 lety +19

      +exitbag123 No, one is the inverse of the other. For example, when you increase something by 100% (1 → 2) and then decrease it by 50% (2 → 1), you end up at the same value. Instead of percentages, you can also write these changes as ratios 2:1 and 1:2 respectively.

  • @Metaldetectiontubeworldwide

    Great video well explained ..
    But i have a question :
    -As the light has been slowed down in the glass , how can it back accelerate to lightspeed when it exits the glass ??
    Greets johny geerts

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 Před 4 lety

      The frequency of light stays the same, so while the speed is reduced, the wavelength gets shorter as well, by the same factor.
      The energy of light depends on the velocity and the wavelength (E=h*c/lambda), so you can cancel out the refractive index and the energy of the light stays the same

  • @neshploda17
    @neshploda17 Před 5 lety +1

    15:33 if the polariton has mass, when the light slows down. And you can make the photon move faster through a solid faster than c0. Does that mean the polariton on that faster than c case, has negative mass?
    I assume it happens through some other mechanism that I just don't understand.

  • @arundhatisharma5743
    @arundhatisharma5743 Před 7 lety +14

    Professor Moriarty? hmmm.... Sherlock, anyone?

  • @danvez5656
    @danvez5656 Před 5 lety +5

    so many experts in the comments, makes you wonder why they even watch this if you already know everything XD

  • @geronimomiles312
    @geronimomiles312 Před měsícem +2

    A polariton exists when the , matter absorbs the light , elevates an electron to the conduction band , leaving an electron hole in the valence band.
    Thus it is the ' treacle' model ' of light passing through matter , which was dismissed as implausible due to the stochastic nature of re-emission.
    ( Essentially this suggests a scattering ,rather than uniform transmission of light... And also it would exhibit differential absorption of photons ) Right?
    The hybrid situation should be called a valoton , as an ephemeral valence state which manifests the propagation of the photon which is arbitrary in wavelength.
    Emerging from the circumstance of substrate , the c speed photon resumes it's trajectory.

  • @petermongan
    @petermongan Před 10 lety

    Hi Brady. Can you do a video on why waves with shorter wavelengths are refracted more in glass? thanks a lot.

  • @jameswilson8270
    @jameswilson8270 Před 6 lety +4

    0.6*1.4 = 0.84

  • @Serdar54321
    @Serdar54321 Před 9 lety +30

    I can't stop laughting when I watch 8:35

    • @miles11we
      @miles11we Před 9 lety +1

      Why?...

    • @Serdar54321
      @Serdar54321 Před 9 lety +7

      Miles Eaton yea but he said it in a way that made it sound like he mean the other way and in a funny way with all the things he did with his hands... So yea, it just made me laugh. So what

    • @miles11we
      @miles11we Před 9 lety

      Weirdos

    • @bobbobson2061
      @bobbobson2061 Před 8 lety +2

      Teorik Redstone'cu What is it like to be twelve?

    • @nightangel7239
      @nightangel7239 Před 8 lety +13

      Bob Bobson What's it like to be hyper-sensitive about words?

  • @MikyRikker1
    @MikyRikker1 Před 10 lety

    Brady, you're a wonderful person

  • @myth-termoth1621
    @myth-termoth1621 Před 6 lety

    so is the speed of light still one over the square root of the magnetic permeability times the dielectric permitivity?
    in other words can you calculate refractive index from the permeability and the dielectric constant of a material?

  • @johnnyllooddte3415
    @johnnyllooddte3415 Před 7 lety +3

    light is so complex no one understands it

    • @johnnyllooddte3415
      @johnnyllooddte3415 Před 7 lety +3

      wow an honest physicist..im impressed

    • @Graeme_Lastname
      @Graeme_Lastname Před 4 lety

      I feel like we know only the roughest approximation of what is really going on. In my life, I have gone from vacuum tubes to tiny boxes with billions of components. What's next? ;)

    • @Graeme_Lastname
      @Graeme_Lastname Před 4 lety

      I feel like we know only the roughest approximation of what is really going on. In my life, I have gone from vacuum tubes to tiny boxes with billions of components. What's next? ;)

    • @omikronweapon
      @omikronweapon Před 4 lety

      @@johnnyllooddte3415 that's a bit of a cop-out though, isn't it? It's too easy to say "I don't understand it, so it's probably beyond all humans to understand". At the same time it sort of implies "why bother with trying to grasp things". There's also a matter of degrees of understanding.
      Of all the things out there, I suspect light isn't very complex by comparison, in any case. Fundamental particles and forces are relatively 'simple'. It's when they start to make up a large system when things start to get "complex".
      The biggest problem for most people, seems to me to be, imagining something at that size, and subjected to forces a layman really doesn't grasp either.

  • @rays5163
    @rays5163 Před 4 lety +28

    8:40 it prefers to be called a differently abled light wave :(

  • @fractalnomics
    @fractalnomics Před 6 lety +1

    A fun 'fact' I came to in my research this week: liquid water and clear glass have something in common with the GHGs; they are all transparent to the visible and opaque to the IR. Water and glass are said to be perfect absorbers of IR; so, glass is a greenhouse solid (a GHS), and water a greenhouse liquid (a GHL).

  • @curiousbit9228
    @curiousbit9228 Před 5 lety

    Wow! I was thinking about this yesterday and This is a great big picture I got from here.

  • @kshgarg1
    @kshgarg1 Před 9 lety +4

    Is it possible?
    That the light travelling through glass doesn't slow down (maintaining that the light always travels at the speed of c. It is actually TIME that slows down inside the glass. The mass of the piece of glass would warp the spacetime (although a little bit) following the general theory of relativity.
    This in effect is gravitational lensing at a smaller level.
    So, the light appears to take longer to get through glass because of the warp in spacetime and since the material is transparent, you can actually see gravitational lensing at play.
    I may be wrong though but I am surprised why general theory of relativity is never thought of as a plausible reason for refraction.

    • @rcgamer7780
      @rcgamer7780 Před 9 lety +6

      Kshitij Garg I don't think that is the case as only massive mass like star can bend light, the mass of a glass is too small to actually bend light.

    • @kshgarg1
      @kshgarg1 Před 9 lety

      Yes, you are right. Probably an experiment should be conducted to see if the deviation in light agrees with eistein's equations. Just to be sure :P

    • @rcgamer7780
      @rcgamer7780 Před 9 lety +2

      Kshitij Garg I think there were already experiment conducted which backed eistein's equations long time ago in 1919.
      When general relativity had been publish, scientists are trying to confirm the theory by observing deflection of light by the Sun, However, normally you cannot observe the stars near the Sun because of sunlight. So in 1919, solar eclipse happened and scientists were able to observed deflection of light by the Sun by observing the change in position of stars when the sun is there or not. In the end the experiment were successful as the change in position of stars and the mass of the sun is matching eistein's general relativity equations.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tests_of_general_relativity#Deflection_of_light_by_the_Sun

    • @rcgamer7780
      @rcgamer7780 Před 9 lety

      Also before the solar ellipse experiment conducted in 1919, not many people know about Einstein and his theory. However after the experiment conducted,The result was considered spectacular news and made the front page of most major newspapers. It made Einstein and his theory of general relativity world-famous.

    • @scottwheeler1641
      @scottwheeler1641 Před 8 lety

      RCgamer 77 But the light isn't passing around the glass, It has to pass through it. I think Kshitij Garg may be right that the speed of light stays the same.

  • @PrivacyKingdoms
    @PrivacyKingdoms Před 9 lety +10

    10:07 he doesnt answer the question at all and now i dont know WHY the net effect of all the light created by the jiggling atoms makes the light slower. just gives some bull shit roundabout answer.

    • @roblaquiere8220
      @roblaquiere8220 Před 9 lety +7

      Another way of thinking of the problem is to imagine light as a wave front moving through the medium and not as a group of photons. Remember, photons are dual wave-like/particle-like phenomena, and therefore talking about the wave aspects of the light wave front is just as legit as the particle aspects. Like the professor explained in the video when you view the light like a wave front then the natural explanation is that the wave will interfere with the medium (and itself, view double slit experiment) and this sum of interferences results in a group velocity less then that of light.
      It's important to understand that photons ARE WAVES TOO. Waves can construct, destruct, and interfere in many ways; such that it appears to create a net effect of slowing the light wave fronts. No individual photon is slower than C, but the intensity peaks of the light wave fronts are moving slower than C by the refractive index of the medium.
      Thinking in only particle ways in QM will only confuse you.

    • @onetwoBias
      @onetwoBias Před 9 lety +3

      mazdaplz Actually that's a misunderstanding, as explained by the professor in the video. It's not really that it takes a longer route, it's just that the original light wave gets into a superposition (read is basically spread out across a volume in the form of more waves) And then the sum of these waves, because they interfere with each other, the sum of their velocities is less than that of light in a vacuum. So the resulting speed is really less than that of light, even though each individual wave is moving at the speed of light in a vacuum.
      That's what I gathered from the explanation given in the video - maybe I got it wrong, at least it still really confuses me quite a bit, so don't be discouraged if my explanation didn't clarify much.

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 Před 9 lety

      Tobias Knudsen mazdaplz I just came back here from minutephysics where Henri gives what is called here the pinball explanation. A poster says: but surely that would result in scattering (the material looks milky) because he's given no reason why the light would go all over the place within the material, but then choose to come out in exactly the same direction it went in (assuming perpendicular incidence). Quite. Prof Merrifield says it's wrong here and I'll go with Merrifield rather than Henry.

    • @GodmyX
      @GodmyX Před 8 lety

      Ray Kent Yeah, Henry's damn smart, but even he as a non-professional physicist not working in the field (unlike the professors) is sometimes guilty into buying into the simplier scenarios which are more mainstream, but as seen, after a careful inspection, quite wrong.

  • @markusantonious8192
    @markusantonious8192 Před 5 lety

    Merrifield is always the most concise, precise and eloquent of these 'sixty symbols' presenters.

  • @Nehmo
    @Nehmo Před 6 lety

    Professor Merrifield laughed a lot and rocked from side to side. The body language translation from that is that he was unsure and felt he was being put on the spot. Considering the answer was as definite as an un-collapsed wave function, this makes sense.

  • @TheRumpusView
    @TheRumpusView Před 10 lety +14

    This explanation is very unsatisfactory.
    At one point while refuting one of the proposed mechanisms the professor states that photons can only interact with atoms at specific frequencies, presumably because of the electron energy levels, yet later, in his explanation, he says that the photons interact with the atoms and "jiggles" them about such that they radiate light as well which superposes with the original light to generate the light at a group velocity which is less than the speed of light.
    At no point does the professor state what sort of interaction this is, and whether it is in any way related to the interactions described above which were dismissed as a possible mechanism.
    So we seem to have either a contradiction or a new magical mechanism which is utterly crucial to understanding what is going.
    Either way the explanation is completely unsatisfactory, and alas is so often the result of these sixty symbols videos.

    • @brodaclop
      @brodaclop Před 10 lety +10

      Try paying more attention to the exact wording and context because it's important.
      He says that "atoms ABSORB light at very specific frequencies". And indeed, absorption is out of the question, it isn't mentioned any more.
      The jiggling thing is entirely different from absorption. He doesn't say that photons jiggle atoms because at that point he's talking about the wave model. (Context!) In this model there are no photons, just an oscillating electromagnetic field, which, as we know, exerts a force on charged particles (electrons for example), which in turn emit their own oscillating electromagnetic field and so on.
      The other, quantum model doesn't require any of this jiggling.

    • @LetalisLatrodectus
      @LetalisLatrodectus Před 10 lety

      You say "At one point while refuting one of the proposed mechanisms the professor states that photons can only interact with atoms at specific frequencies"
      The professor never stated this. He said photons can only be ABSORBED at specific frequencies. They can interact with photons as much as they want at any frequency though but not absorb them. So his explanation holds.

    • @squidb8
      @squidb8 Před 10 lety

      in case you didn't understand.
      When light interacts with an atom it cause an electron to jump to a higher energy state, go from an orbit that is further from the core, eventually the atom will have to come down to it rest state, and it will emit a photon.
      Therefore a photon is a packet of energy.
      I think the problem is that these are university professors they never taught high school, and hardly remember when they were first introduced to physics. They fail to understand the difficulty of some people have at grasping quantum physics.

    • @LetalisLatrodectus
      @LetalisLatrodectus Před 10 lety +1

      squidb8
      You are talking about absorption and emission which is one way a photon interacts with atoms but not the only way. A photon can also interact with atoms without being absorbed, without making an electron jump to a higher orbit.

    • @SuperJonny7
      @SuperJonny7 Před 10 lety

      the explanation is that the photons excite electrons in the conduction band to recombine with holes in the valence band, forming an electron-hole recombination pair, which then emits a photon

  • @CreatorOfJoy1
    @CreatorOfJoy1 Před 9 lety +15

    So in other words scientist have no idea why light slows down

    • @masansr
      @masansr Před 7 lety +14

      He just explained 3 ideas, didn't you watch the video?

    • @CreatorOfJoy1
      @CreatorOfJoy1 Před 7 lety +1

      masansr So. which of the 3 ideas is correct?

    • @masansr
      @masansr Před 7 lety +9

      All three of them. Just from different viewpoints.

    • @alucardwhitehair
      @alucardwhitehair Před 7 lety +32

      I love it when people mistake their own ignorance for the ignorance of others. Its quite entertaining.

    • @myothersoul1953
      @myothersoul1953 Před 6 lety +5

      FrankCoffman - Science is a buffet of choices, it's that and a very careful way of choosing. Three explanations that work are three explanations, choose the one that works best for the particular case.
      Reality isn't a buffet of choices, there's only one and there's no choice.

  • @danielgc857
    @danielgc857 Před 10 lety

    So I have a question. When the proffessor mentioned the energy approach (meaning when he talked about the wave losing energy inside the medium), it made me ask myself: then how does it gain the energy back after exiting the medium? Maybe this way of loking at the problem is wrong, and if it's not, what's the reason?

  • @IterativeTheoryRocks
    @IterativeTheoryRocks Před rokem

    I like the last explanation best. It makes sense that if the polariton has mass, it would travel slower than c.
    Also, for the first classical explanation, I always interpreted it as the ‘interference’ from the juggling atoms continuously ‘steals’ from the front of the photon wave and adds it back at the tail end, thus slowing it down overall.

  • @Yellonet
    @Yellonet Před 10 lety

    So, do the photons really get through the glass, or do they create a sort of chain reaction that, some time later, spawns a new photon on the other side of the material?
    Also, what determines which frequency will get through a given material?
    For example, how does lead compare with glass and why?

  • @cosminzamfir1803
    @cosminzamfir1803 Před 3 lety

    It would be interesting to explain why it also bends when crossing the separation between the 2 mediums

  • @nogood237
    @nogood237 Před 9 měsíci

    Question: If I shine a light on a piece of glass that is 0.5 a light year thick and then on the other side of it I have another 0.5 a light year of vacuum before I have a detector, does the light reach the detector in 1 light year still or dose it take 1.4*0.5 + 0.5 light years now?

  • @honkatatonka
    @honkatatonka Před 5 lety

    I still have trouble with this field stuff. An electromagnetic wave is this excitation of the EM field, but what now is a photon? Is it a result of the excitation? If there's a photon moving through the field, does it excite it ? Famn, even asking those questions confuses me :(

  • @lukeverbout6843
    @lukeverbout6843 Před 9 lety

    I like this way better, even though it's longer I feel like I get a better understanding than the shorter videos

  • @GFlCh
    @GFlCh Před 10 lety

    @Michael_Koppenol Part-2
    When it reaches the final smaller pipe, it will "speed up" to the original 4 mm per second.
    2) Due to the electromagnetic interference experienced by the photon, it is effectively given some mass, so with constant energy, it's speed is "dragged down". Once it leaves the medium, it no longer experiences the interference. Since it has the same energy as originally, it returns to the original speed.

  • @sacredkinetics.lns.8352
    @sacredkinetics.lns.8352 Před 4 lety +1

    Beautifully explained. 💫✨💫
    "Your videos are Humanity's treasure".

  • @JackFou
    @JackFou Před 7 lety +1

    So if the interaction of a photon with the lattice of a solid material creates a new kind of particle which has mass and subsequently travels at less than the speed of light, what does this model say in those curious cases briefly mentioned where you can cause the speed of light inside the material to be higher than the speed of light in vacuum?

  • @rkpetry
    @rkpetry Před 6 lety +1

    ...have you/anybody compared the capture of photons of specific energy by atoms versus the same atoms embedded in glass nonchemically, to see whether absorption detects the photons as having different-wavelength-energy...

  • @SanyaLOLZ
    @SanyaLOLZ Před 10 lety

    So, seen some questions about reflection. If i remember correctly, metals reflect light when their electrons are so densely packed, and most often free, so when the light hits the material the interaction is so big that it's reflected.. Mirrors also depend on the crystalline structure, if materials aren't crystalline they're usually transparent or diffusive reflectors.
    I got a question tho. What happens to the photon when it exit a material that slowed it down. I mean, I guess not every photon have the a bit lower energy, then we would see redshifts, right? So are there just less of them?

  • @MetalKabu
    @MetalKabu Před 8 lety

    I would really like to know how optical rotation works on a moleculare (or smaller) basis. what happens to the light when it hits chiral molecules and how does it fit into the explanation of 'slowing down'. I bet theres some connection between those two phenomenons. if someone knows something about that topic i'd really appreciate the information (or links to some information)

  • @Lamnom
    @Lamnom Před 9 lety

    Once light exits the medium (e.g. glass), does it have the same energy and speed as it did before entering?