Site
Dr. Lijun Wang and his colleagues from Princeton University NEC Research Institute shocked the scientific community when they announced the results of an experiment they carried out in 2000.
The team carried out the experiment by sending a light pulse into a cesium cell specially designed for this experiment.
In this study, in which very delicate time measuring equipment was used, the light pulse re-phased before it entered the cesium cell. It was established that after the light pulse left the cesium cell and covered a distance of 20 meters, it also entered the cesium cell at that exact moment.
In other words, Wang states that the light pulse appears in two different points at the very same time. That is, the light pulse exits the cesium cell before it enters it.
Raymond Chiao, professor of physics at Berkeley University, who examined the experiment states that the test results reveal an incredible situation. According to the laws of physics, all forms of data can be transmitted at a maximum speed of 300,000 kilometers per second. Time is also calculated relatively by this speed of light.
In the event the validity of Wang's experiment is confirmed, one of the main principles of physics, the "law of cause and effect," which can be summarized as, "Cause precedes the result, or the end of a phenomenon appears after its beginning" will no longer be true. In this respect, the result of a phenomenon precedes the cause that creates it. This makes it possible for a process to end before it begins. The experiment results signify that our familiar concept of time will "collapse."