Originally posted by: gururu
the conclusions are misleading. The big problem with the experiment is that it does not account for the signature of the input light versus the output. That is, physically they may be similar (frequency, wavelength, velocity, etc), but are the photons injected the same photons ejected?
What I think: The matrix (cesium gas preparation) is absorbing the photons injected, and delivering newly generated photons at the other end. The photons expelled are the same velocity as the photons injected, but the time of delivery is far too rapid than the time necessary for the original photons to traverse the distance between input and output. Therefore, the conclusion is that the 'message' surpassed the speed of light.
Until they can prove that the same photons injected are those ejected, I wouldn't conclude that any subatomic particle or photon is capable of exceeding the velocity of light. The phenomenon just seems to be a special case in which the medium is capable of transducing an emission downstream upon excitation at a rate that would rival and/or surpass the time it took the input photons to reach the detected emission.