In: Physics
Reading this PE question can-we-transport-energy-over-infinite-distances-through-vacuum-using-light, a related question arises naturally:
Is energy transported (by light)? -- (I did believed in this answer until now) or energy is already 'in site' (vacuum) just expecting to be excited by the photons?
This news insinuated the doubt anti-laser(1)
The antilaser does the reverse: Two perfect beams of laser light go in, and are completely absorbed.
If vacuum is able to absorb energy then it can do the reverse, and supply energy. We are already prepared to accept that vacuum has energy.
I am inclined to accept that energy do not travel at all. What is travelling is the excitation of vacuum, and we call this: photons. It may appear a question of semantics, but I think that the explicit reconaissance of this notion can be helpful.
(1) The two rays entering the slab are in phase opposition when they met, and cancel. The nature of cancelation was obscure to me, until now.
added:
I googled this: "where goes the energy in a destructive interference" and followed past answers to this question. Someone answered "into the surrounding environment." We are in minority;) Most of the times they said that the total extinguishing is impossible. This anti-laser experiment shows that energy is destroyed.
We see the same effect with sound cancelation , with boat wake (trailing waves) cancelation (by double/triple hull or when they sail in formation), and now with light.
added after 2 answers
image from astro-canada.ca
What is amazing is that this fact is inside the theory since the
begining, quoting from there:
In 1801, the British physicist Thomas Young demonstrated that light propagates as waves, like waves on the surface of water. Young understood that when two light waves meet, they interact with each other. Scientists call this
From the experiment with the silicon wafer we get the information that heat was generated. When two coherent beams of photons interfered destructively, heat appeared.
What is heat in this particular case? Heat results when a bunch of infrared incoherent photons interact with matter. The destructive interference of the waves of photons became a burst of incoherent infrared photons heating the wafer..
The same will happen in vacuum. The disappearance of the laser coherence will be accompanied by a burst of infrared photons.
You can think of it as the particle nature of light dominating, with multiple photons scatterings on virtual electron loops from each other. The energy would be all there in the infrared burst. Because the momenta of the two beams are in the same x direction, they can only scatter within the Heisenberg uncertainty allowance in space, and thus turn into photons of very low energy.
This could be tested experimentally in vacuum , by detecting the infrared from the destructive interference. I think it is the correct view because the claim that "energy disappears" is not viable within our local physics framework . If the experiment shows no infrared correlated with the interference, then one would have proof of extra dimensions into which the energy was dissipated.
Edit after more thought:
The higher order loops I have recourse to in my argument above in vacuum , have small probability: photon photon scattering is higher order with 4 1/137 vertices. I think that the answer lies within the formalism that Lubos develops in his blog after this question was asked, of how the classical wave emerges from the quantum mechanical.
I believe now that the answer for the vacuum is that: completely overlapping out of phase opposite direction beams will go their way minimally affecting each other with higher order processes, and will appear at their ends with their energy diminished a bit by the higher order processes. In vacuum there is no material for the classical electromagnetic wave to collectively interact and it is just photons running with the speed of light.