Using a “time-reversal” technique, researchers have discovered how to transmit power, sound or images
to a “nonlinear object” without knowing the object’s exact location or affecting objects around it. (Credit: © adimas / Fotolia)
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/12/121206124346.htm
'Time Reversal' Research May Open Doors to Future Tech
"That's the magic of time reversal," says Steven Anlage, a university physics professor involved in the project. "When you reverse the waveform's direction in space and time, it follows the same path it took coming out and finds its way exactly back to the source."
Play It Backwards
The time-reversal process is less like living the last five minutes over and more like playing a record backwards, explains Matthew Frazier, a postdoctoral research fellow in the university's physics department. When a signal travels through the air, its waveforms scatter before an antenna picks it up. Recording the received signal and transmitting it backwards reverses the scatter and sends it back as a focused beam in space and time.
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