Fictional Technology: Bob Shaw's Slow Glass

Author: DrPatPublished: May 29, 2005 at 10:13 pm 1 comment

Bob Shaw's singular contribution to science fiction came in small packages. Shaw wrote many short stories (one, Light of Other Days, is available online), and a novel, Other Days, Other Eyes, using this speculative technology. But these stories were no more about slow glass than Camus' The Plague (La Peste) is about Yersinia pestis.

Technovelgy's entry for slow glass gives a brief description of the "Bose-Einstein condensate" that forms slow glass, and its critical property:

Bose-Einstein condensates are created when atoms are cooled to absolute zero; the atoms collapse into the lowest quantum state, producing a superfluid... Bose-Einstein condensates have optical densities such that the speed of light passing through the mass is extremely low—walking speed as opposed to its usual 186,000 miles per second.

From that concept, Shaw built a amazing sub-genre of "what-if" speculation. One story has a murder witnessed by slow glass; some years later it will divulge the shocking truth. When it does, will the murderer be the same person he once was, or will his long contemplation of the inevitable revelation have changed him? Another tale dwells briefly on the contented married life of a man in the country, as seen by passers-by and brief visitors. But inside the cottage, a very different state of life is hidden by the outward display supplied by the slow glass. Superficially this is simply poignant, but underneath lies an allegory of the occult nature of every marriage.

The light that passed through Shaw's slow glass illuminated (eventually) many facets of the human condition. What more ought we to ask of fiction, science or otherwise?

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DrPat is the blog signature used by an old coot who hoards books, dances Argentine Tango, cooks a mean venison chili, and is happy to be along for the sag while my spouse does a marathon bicycle ride. …

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  • 1 - Dr. Slow

    Aug 21, 2005 at 8:22 pm

    Hi,
    have published (in press) a paper with the Optical Engineering Society called SPIE titled "Design Considerations in the Realization of Slow Glass." It considers the use of Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in a crystal (Pr:YSiO5). Multiple crystals are placed on a mechanical conveyor loop, with intermediate optical regenerative stages. The loop rotates in the opposite direction of the image propagation. It is rather like a person walking up a down escalator. At the proper walking speed, the person would appear to be moving forward (up) very slowly or even standing still.

    This addresses the issue of Bose-Einstein Condensate, even at 17 meters per second light speed, would have to be 17 meters long just to produce an optical delay of only one second. Consider the length to produce slow glass of year long delay!

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