Thedreadedwiccan points out a summary of a of late released physics paper about tying knots with light. A pair of researchers showed that a proportionately new unravel
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definition:something worked out to explain to Maxwell's equations allows light to be twisted into stable loops. They are conniving experiments to test the theory now, and it could have a big impact on fusion technology. The paper's abstract is free at Nature, through a cable system tv is prerequisite to see the rest. Quoting: "In special situations, however, the loops might be stable, such as if light travels through plasma instead of through free space. One of the problems that has plagued vivisection
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document.writ nuclear fusion reactors is that the plasma at the heart of them moves faster and faster and tends to escape. That motion can be abused staple with charismatic fields, but current methods to give rise to
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document.wri those fields still don't do the job. If Irvine and Bouwmeester's ascertainment could be used to set off fields that would send the plasma in closed, non-expanding loops and help contain it, 'that would be extremely spectacular,' Bouwmeester says."
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