Genesis 1:3
*God's ordered DESIGN of the Universe, such as the Fibonacci Number, is even even in Light.
"Beams of light that can be guided into corkscrew-like shapes called optical vortices are used today in a range of applications. Pushing the limits of structured light, Harvard applied physicists in the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) report a new type of optical vortex beam that not only twists as it travels but also changes in different parts at different rates to create unique patterns. The way the light behaves resembles spiral shapes common in nature.
The researchers borrowed from classical mechanics to nickname their never-before-demonstrated light vortex an "optical rotatum," to describe how the torque on the light's corkscrew shape gradually changes. In Newtonian physics, "rotatum" is the rate of change in torque on an object over time.
In a peculiar twist, the researchers found that their orbital angular momentum-carrying beam of light grows in a mathematically recognizable pattern found all over the natural world. Mirroring the Fibonacci number sequence, their optical rotatum propagates in a logarithmic spiral that is seen in the shell of a nautilus, the seeds of a sunflower, and the branches of trees."
"Beams of light that can be guided into corkscrew-like shapes called optical vortices are used today in a range of applications. Pushing the limits of structured light, Harvard applied physicists in the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) report a new type of optical vortex beam that not only twists as it travels but also changes in different parts at different rates to create unique patterns. The way the light behaves resembles spiral shapes common in nature.
The researchers borrowed from classical mechanics to nickname their never-before-demonstrated light vortex an "optical rotatum," to describe how the torque on the light's corkscrew shape gradually changes. In Newtonian physics, "rotatum" is the rate of change in torque on an object over time.
In a peculiar twist, the researchers found that their orbital angular momentum-carrying beam of light grows in a mathematically recognizable pattern found all over the natural world. Mirroring the Fibonacci number sequence, their optical rotatum propagates in a logarithmic spiral that is seen in the shell of a nautilus, the seeds of a sunflower, and the branches of trees."
Phys.org