
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1085950
KEY POINTS:
Excitingly, these simulations recreate a bizarre phenomenon predicted by quantum physics, known as vacuum four-wave mixing. This states that the combined electromagnetic field of three focused laser pulses can polarise the virtual electron-positron pairs of a vacuum, causing photons to bounce off each other like billiard balls – generating a fourth laser beam in a ‘light from darkness’ process. These events could act as a probe of new physics at extremely high intensities.
“This is not just an academic curiosity—it is a major step toward experimental confirmation of quantum effects that until now have been mostly theoretical,” said study co-author Professor Peter Norreys, Department of Physics, University of Oxford... (MORE - details, no ads)
PAPER: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42005-025-02128-8
KEY POINTS:
- Physicists at the University of Oxford have successfully simulated how light interacts with empty space—a phenomenon once thought to belong purely to the realm of science fiction.
- The simulations recreated a bizarre phenomenon predicted by quantum physics, where light appears to be generated from darkness.
- The findings pave the way for real-world laser facilities to experimentally confirm bizarre quantum phenomena.
- The results have been published today (5 June) in Communications Physics.
Excitingly, these simulations recreate a bizarre phenomenon predicted by quantum physics, known as vacuum four-wave mixing. This states that the combined electromagnetic field of three focused laser pulses can polarise the virtual electron-positron pairs of a vacuum, causing photons to bounce off each other like billiard balls – generating a fourth laser beam in a ‘light from darkness’ process. These events could act as a probe of new physics at extremely high intensities.
“This is not just an academic curiosity—it is a major step toward experimental confirmation of quantum effects that until now have been mostly theoretical,” said study co-author Professor Peter Norreys, Department of Physics, University of Oxford... (MORE - details, no ads)
PAPER: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42005-025-02128-8