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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Thu Mar 9, 2017, 01:23 PM Mar 2017

The Quest to Crystallize Time

By Elizabeth Gibney,

Christopher Monroe spends his life poking at atoms with light. He arranges them into rings and chains and then massages them with lasers to explore their properties and make basic quantum computers. Last year, he decided to try something seemingly impossible: to create a time crystal.

The name sounds like a prop from Doctor Who, but it has roots in actual physics. Time crystals are hypothetical structures that pulse without requiring any energy—like a ticking clock that never needs winding. The pattern repeats in time in much the same way that the atoms of a crystal repeat in space. The idea was so challenging that when Nobel prizewinning physicist Frank Wilczek proposed the provocative concept in 2012, other researchers quickly proved there was no way to create time crystals.

But there was a loophole—and researchers in a separate branch of physics found a way to exploit the gap. Monroe, a physicist at the University of Maryland in College Park, and his team used chains of atoms they had constructed for other purposes to make a version of a time crystal. “I would say it sort of fell in our laps,” says Monroe.

And a group led by researchers at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, independently fashioned time crystals out of 'dirty' diamonds. Both versions, which are published this week in Nature, are considered time crystals, but not how Wilczek originally imagined. “It's less weird than the first idea, but it's still fricking weird,” says Norman Yao, a physicist at the University of California, Berkeley, and an author on both papers.

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https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-quest-to-crystallize-time/

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The Quest to Crystallize Time (Original Post) n2doc Mar 2017 OP
My theory is that the Multiverse is one big time crystal al bupp Mar 2017 #1
Well, we will see how this works out. longship Mar 2017 #2

al bupp

(2,167 posts)
1. My theory is that the Multiverse is one big time crystal
Thu Mar 9, 2017, 02:32 PM
Mar 2017

Unfortunately, there's probably no way prove, except mathematically.

longship

(40,416 posts)
2. Well, we will see how this works out.
Thu Mar 9, 2017, 03:28 PM
Mar 2017

Not sure that I get it, in spite of my physics education. But I like physicists who live out on the edge of the known. That's where the action is.

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