Researchers have used nonlocal artificial materials to mimic the effects of wormholes and multiple realities. When light enters one boundary in the artificial material, it experiences an entirely different set of optical effects compared with light entering from another boundary. Surprisingly, each of these optical experiences can occur without any interference between them.

The researchers liken this effect to C.S. Lewis’s classic, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, where different “doors” could lead to entirely separate worlds located in a single place.

  • Sundray@lemmus.org
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    10 hours ago

    I can barely read this article, but I think it’s saying that some scientists have come up with a way to create an image source that results in two different images being transmitted simultaneously through a single medium without interfering with each other. What this gets you in practical terms I don’t know. Maybe increasing the data carrying capacity of fiber optic cables? 🤷‍♀️

    • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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      18 hours ago

      I have called out numerous articles for being ai written myself.

      This one however reads very human and does not have the obvious tells of ai.

      It also uses and describes coherent pictures from the actual research.

      The “wormhole, multiple realities” thing is hyperbolic, the researchers even directly state that that is not really what is going on but the analogy might help people grasp what is actually going on.

      I have been interested into “nano composite/meta materials”for a while, personally labeling it the most important technological breakthrough to date.

      What this research has found was theoretically expected, it significantly lifts me up to read we managed to demonstrate it in our lifetime.