Can I Pour You a Pint of Light?
| Photographs courtesy of Humberto Michinel (6). |
Simulations (above) show that a gigawatt laser could condense the photons in the beam into droplets, each about 1/500 of an inch across. Drops of liquid lightan entirely new form of matterwould have many of the properties of liquid water, including surface tension. "They could also form into eddieswhirlpools of light," Michinel says. Sprinkles of light might someday transport data in an optical computer: "You could make two liquid droplets collide, like billiard balls, to make a logic gate that switches a bit from a 0 to a 1," Michinel says. But first he needs to create actual liquid light in the lab, which could take a year or two.


