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Physicists have 'solved' mystery of levitation

By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
08/08/2007
The Telegraph



Levitation has been elevated from being pure science fiction to science fact, according to a study reported today by physicists.


linked-image
In theory the discovery could be used to levitate a person


In earlier work the same team of theoretical physicists showed that invisibility cloaks are feasible.

Now, in another report that sounds like it comes out of the pages of a Harry Potter book, the University of St Andrews team has created an 'incredible levitation effects’ by engineering the force of nature which normally causes objects to stick together.

Professor Ulf Leonhardt and Dr Thomas Philbin, from the University of St Andrews in Scotland, have worked out a way of reversing this pheneomenon, known as the Casimir force, so that it repels instead of attracts.

Their discovery could ultimately lead to frictionless micro-machines with moving parts that levitate But they say that, in principle at least, the same effect could be used to levitate bigger objects too, even a person.

The Casimir force is a consequence of quantum mechanics, the theory that describes the world of atoms and subatomic particles that is not only the most successful theory of physics but also the most baffling.

The force is due to neither electrical charge or gravity, for example, but the fluctuations in all-pervasive energy fields in the intervening empty space between the objects and is one reason atoms stick together, also explaining a “dry glue” effect that enables a gecko to walk across a ceiling.

Now, using a special lens of a kind that has already been built, Prof Ulf Leonhardt and Dr Thomas Philbin report in the New Journal of Physics they can engineer the Casimir force to repel, rather than attact.

Because the Casimir force causes problems for nanotechnologists, who are trying to build electrical circuits and tiny mechanical devices on silicon chips, among other things, the team believes the feat could initially be used to stop tiny objects from sticking to each other.

Prof Leonhardt explained, “The Casimir force is the ultimate cause of friction in the nano-world, in particular in some microelectromechanical systems.

Such systems already play an important role - for example tiny mechanical devices which triggers a car airbag to inflate or those which power tiny 'lab on chip’ devices used for drugs testing or chemical analysis.

Micro or nano machines could run smoother and with less or no friction at all if one can manipulate the force.” Though it is possible to levitate objects as big as humans, scientists are a long way off developing the technology for such feats, said Dr Philbin.

The practicalities of designing the lens to do this are daunting but not impossible and levitation “could happen over quite a distance”.

Prof Leonhardt leads one of four teams - three of them in Britain - to have put forward a theory in a peer-reviewed journal to achieve invisibility by making light waves flow around an object - just as a river flows undisturbed around a smooth rock.

telegraph.co.uk
6piedotcom
This all sounds great I just don't want to wake up some morning on my ceiling.


Gravity is no problem as long as you stay away from large bodies of mass. laugh.gif
Yugure
Dude... freakin awesome!! I want to be a test dummy for that!!

Just kidding.... sort of.
ships-cat
Levitation is usualy thought of as the ability of a person to lift themselves off the floor by the force of will, or the intervention of external powers or forces under the control of that will. (Psioinics or Magic, depending on your viewpoint. ).

There is nothing in this report to suggest any such thing (or indeed, to suggest that reversing the Casimir effect could enable someone to 'levitate'.). You may just as well say that a helicopter enables someone to levitate. (there are also tricks with magnetic fields that could accomplish the same thing.)

However, dabbling with the Casimir effect is worrying. I believe this links into such topics as zero-point energy (or vacumn energy), which is scary - if not apocolyptic - stuff. I hope these guys know what they're doing.

Meow Purr.
Legatus Legionis
QUOTE(ships-cat @ Aug 26 2007, 07:39 AM) *
However, dabbling with the Casimir effect is worrying. I believe this links into such topics as zero-point energy (or vacumn energy), which is scary - if not apocolyptic - stuff. I hope these guys know what they're doing.

Meow Purr.

i agree, discovering and solving mysteries for the good of us is not bad. but there's someone there with loads of money and powerhungry might just one day turn science into it's arsenal of weapons.
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