Physicists Create World’s First Time Crystal

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  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    Intelligent Machines

    Physicists Create World’s First

    Time Crystal


    Time crystals were first predicted in 2012.



    Now researchers have created time crystals

    for the first time and say they could one day

    be used as quantum memories.




    Crystals are extraordinary objects, not least because of their symmetry.

    Crystals form repeating patterns that are the same in some directions
    but not all directions.

    That’s something of a surprise given that the laws of physics,
    which govern their formation, are the same in all directions.

    That the laws of physics are spatially symmetrical but crystals are not is a phenomenon known as symmetry breaking.

    It comes about not by adding energy
    to a system, but by taking it away.

    Indeed, crystals are a manifestation of systems in their lowest energy states.

    But the laws of physics are not only symmetrical in space but also in time.

    And that raises the interesting question of whether it is possible
    to break temporal symmetry in the same way.

    In other words, is it possible to create time crystals?
    time-crystal.

    Today, we get an answer thanks to the work of Chris Monroe
    at the University of Maryland in College Park and a few pals,
    who have created a time crystal in their laboratory for the first time.

    The basic process for making time crystals is straightforward.

    The idea is to create a quantum system, such as a group of ions arranged in a ring, and cool them until they are in their lowest energy state.

    In these circumstances, the laws of physics would suggest that the ring
    should be perfectly stationary.

    But if time symmetry were broken, then the ring could vary periodically in time.

    In other words, it would rotate.

    Of course, it would never be possible to extract energy from this motion
    —that would violate the conservation of energy.

    But the temporal symmetry-breaking would manifest itself
    in this repeating motion in time, just as spatial symmetry-breaking
    manifests itself as repeating patterns in space.

    That’s the theory, but in the real world, things are not quite as simple.

    The main problem is that the quantum world is not governed
    by time-dependent variables, so time symmetry cannot be broken
    on this scale.

    So in ordinary circumstances, cooling a ring of ions
    to their lowest energy state would leave them stationary.

    But there are circumstances in which quantum systems do evolve over time.

    Munro and co have focused on these: quantum systems
    that are not in equilibrium.

    Their quantum system is a line of ytterbium ions with spins
    that interact with each other.

    That interaction leads to a special kind of behavior.

    One of the strange features of quantum particles is that
    they do not usually exist in specific locations.

    Instead they are smeared out in space with the chances of them
    appearing anywhere governed by the laws of probability.
    But in some circumstances this can change.

    For example, a single electron inside a material can interfere
    with itself in a way that forces it to appear in a single location.

    This is known as Anderson localization, after the physicist
    who predicted it in the 1950s.

    More recently, physicists have investigated groups of quantum particles
    that interact with each other in a way that causes them all to become localized.

    This so-called many body localization is a delicate state that maintains
    the quantum particles in an out-of-equilibrium state.

    In other words, it forces them to be localized.

    And that’s exactly how this chain of ytterbium ions behaves.

    One of the key properties of these ions is their magnetization or spin,
    which can be flipped up or down using a laser.

    Flipping the spin of one ion causes the next to flip, and so on.

    These spin interactions then oscillate at a rate that depends
    on how regularly the laser flips the original spin.

    In other words, the driving frequency determines the rate of oscillation.
    But when Monroe and co measured this, they found another effect.

    These guys discovered that after allowing the system to evolve,
    the interactions occurred at a rate that was twice the original period.

    Since there is no driving force with that period, the only explanation
    is that the time symmetry must have been broken,
    thereby allowing these longer periods.

    In other words, Monroe and co had created a time crystal.

    The team went on to measure some of the properties of these crystals.

    They found, for example, that changing the driving frequency did not change the frequency of the time crystal.

    “This represents the ‘rigidity’ of the discrete time crystal,” they say.

    And they found that other perturbations could eventually destroy
    the time crystal.

    “When the perturbations are too large, the crystal ‘melts,’”
    say Monroe and co.

    That’s interesting, if esoteric, work.

    It shows that the time crystals can actually exist, as predicted in 2012
    by the Nobel-prize winning physicist Frank Wilczek at MIT
    and Al Shapere at the University of Kentucky.

    As for applications, Monroe and co make a couple of suggestions.

    They say, for example, that time crystals could be used for quantum information tasks, such as implementing a robust quantum memory.

    But the exotic nature of many body localization and the fact that it is still poorly understood may mean that other physicists will want to check out the nature
    of this effect carefully before confirming that it really shows the existence
    of time crystals.

    So there’s more exciting work to be done.

    Ref: http://arxiv.org/abs/1609.08684: Observation of a Discrete Time Crystal

    https://www.technologyreview.com/s/...doOVacmA9993rE-ax2O_wVkcyeq2pbH_1ShG9RTwhsXAc
     

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