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What did Dickens know about Phaseonium?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Jean-Paul Revel*
Affiliation:
CALTECH

Extract

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In the Pickwick Papers, Charles Dickens has his character Sam exclaim that he needed “a pair o’ patent double million magnifyin’ gas microscopes of hextra power” Now the general wisdom is that improvements to microscopy are bounded by the laws of optics which tell us that resolution is a function of the wavelength of the radiation used for imaging and inversely proportional to the refractive index of the medium and lens. We have discussed in this space various ways which can and have been used to “circumvent” mother nature, by such tricks as not using lenses and employing scanning techniques instead in order to obtain images.

It turns out that there may yet be other useful “loopholes” in natural laws. Lefs for example consider the fact that the refractive index of a material is a measure of the interaction of photons with the matter they traverse. In that sense refraction is related to absorption, which occurs when materials interact so strongly with photons that the latter never emerge.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1993

References

1. Dickens, C. (1836) Pickwick Papers, Ch34: The memorable trial of Bardell against against Pickwick.Google Scholar
2. Singer, N. (1992) Coupled slates clear darkness and quiet the light. Science 258, 3233.Google Scholar
3. Fleischhauer, M. e! al. (1992) Resonantly enhanced refraciive index withoul absorption via atomic coherence Phys. Rev. A 46, 14681487 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4. Scully, M.O.. From lasers and masers to phaseonium and phasersd (1992) Physics Reports 219, 191201 Google Scholar