What if light had no source? Intersecting invisible beams could place illumination anywhere—no fixtures, no wires—turning rooms into programmable fields of floating light.
What began as a thought experiment is becoming the foundation of a new physical reality
By Futurist Thomas Frey
Part 1 of 3: The Point of Light
More than twenty years ago, I found myself staring at the ceiling of a room and thinking a thought that seemed, at the time, almost too simple to be interesting.
What if the light didn’t need to be there?
Not the light itself — the fixture. The bulb. The wire running through the wall to the panel in the basement. The entire physical infrastructure of illumination that we’ve inherited from Thomas Edison and that we’ve never seriously questioned because it works and because we built our entire civilization around it before anyone thought to ask whether there was another way.
The thought went like this. If two invisible beams of energy crossed at a point in space, and if something happened at that crossing point that produced visible light — no bulb, no filament, no surface, no wiring — then you could place a point of light anywhere in a room simply by directing two beams to intersect at that location. You could fill a room with floating points of light the way a night sky is filled with stars. You could light a space without touching it. Without installing anything in it. Without running a single wire.
I turned the thought over for years. It seemed physically plausible in outline, intuitively satisfying in a way that good ideas tend to feel, and practically very far from anything buildable. I filed it in the category of ideas worth watching and moved on.
What I didn’t anticipate was how quickly the underlying physics would go from theoretical to demonstrated — and how the demonstration would open a set of doors that lead somewhere considerably larger than a lighting fixture.
This is the first column in a three-part series about what happens when you follow that thought experiment all the way to its conclusions. The destination is more radical than the starting point suggests.
Continue reading… “The Light That Floats in Nothing”
