
CrowdScience Can we cancel light waves?
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Feb 13, 2026 Stefan Rotter, theoretical physicist exploring anti‑lasers and perfect absorbers. Jeremy Baumberg, nanophotonics expert who manipulates light with hands‑on demos. They discuss destructive interference with lasers, the anti‑laser that traps and absorbs coherent light, and why cancelling everyday incoherent light like sunlight is far more challenging.
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Key Difference: Measurement Speed
- Noise cancellation measures sound crests and troughs in time and injects an inverse waveform to remove them.
- Light waves oscillate far faster, so direct time-domain measurement and active inversion for broad-spectrum light is currently impractical.
Cancelling Works For Coherent Light
- You can cancel coherent, single-colour light by generating an inverse wave to create destructive interference.
- Everyday light (sunlight, bulbs) is incoherent and varies per pixel, making broad cancellation practically infeasible today.
Interference Creates Bright And Dark Stripes
- Interference produces bright and dark fringes because peaks can add or cancel with troughs.
- Achieving cancellation at one spot typically produces constructive interference elsewhere, so you get brighter areas next to dark ones.
