• Time crystals leave the lab

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon Feb 14 21:30:48 2022
    Time crystals leave the lab
    Time crystals that persist indefinitely at room temperature could have applications in precision timekeeping

    Date:
    February 14, 2022
    Source:
    University of California - Riverside
    Summary:
    Cutting-edge research has observed time crystals in a system that is
    not isolated from its ambient environment. This major achievement
    brings scientists one step closer to developing time crystals for
    use in real- world applications.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    We have all seen crystals, whether a simple grain of salt or sugar, or
    an elaborate and beautiful amethyst. These crystals are made of atoms or molecules repeating in a symmetrical three-dimensional pattern called
    a lattice, in which atoms occupy specific points in space. By forming
    a periodic lattice, carbon atoms in a diamond, for example, break the
    symmetry of the space they sit in.

    Physicists call this "breaking symmetry."

    ========================================================================== Scientists have recently discovered that a similar effect can be witnessed
    in time. Symmetry breaking, as the name suggests, can arise only where
    some sort of symmetry exists. In the time domain, a cyclically changing
    force or energy source naturally produces a temporal pattern.

    Breaking of the symmetry occurs when a system driven by such a force
    faces a de'ja` vu moment, but not with the same period as that of the
    force. 'Time crystals' have in the past decade been pursued as a new
    phase of matter, and more recently observed under elaborate experimental conditions in isolated systems. These experiments require extremely low temperatures or other rigorous conditions to minimize undesired external influences, called noise.

    In order for scientists to learn more about time crystals and employ
    their potential in technology, they need to find ways to produce time crystalline states and keep them stable outside the laboratory.

    Cutting-edge research led by UC Riverside and published this week
    inNature Communicationshas now observed time crystals in a system that
    is not isolated from its ambient environment. This major achievement
    brings scientists one step closer to developing time crystals for use
    in real-world applications.

    "When your experimental system has energy exchange with its surroundings, dissipation and noise work hand-in-hand to destroy the temporal order,"
    said lead author Hossein Taheri, an assistant research professor
    of electrical and computer engineering in UC Riverside's Marlan and
    Rosemary Bourns College of Engineering. "In our photonic platform,
    the system strikes a balance between gain and loss to create and
    preserve time crystals." The all-optical time crystal is realized
    using a disk-shaped magnesium fluoride glass resonator one millimeter
    in diameter. When bombarded by two laser beams, the researchers observed subharmonic spikes, or frequency tones between the two laser beams, that indicated breaking of temporal symmetry and creation of time crystals.

    The UCR-led team utilized a technique called self-injection locking of the
    two lasers to the resonator to achieve robustness against environmental effects.

    Signatures of the temporally repeating state of this system can readily
    be measured in the frequency domain. The proposed platform therefore
    simplifies the study of this new phase of matter.

    Without the need for a low temperature, the system can be moved outside
    a complex lab for field applications. One such application could be
    highly accurate measurements of time. Because frequency and time are mathematical inverses of each other, accuracy in measuring frequency
    enables accurate time measurement.

    "We hope that this photonic system can be utilized in compact and
    lightweight radiofrequency sources with superior stability as well as
    in precision timekeeping," said Taheri.

    The open-access Nature Communications paper, "All-optical dissipative
    discrete time crystals," is available here. Taheri was joined in the
    research by Andrey B. Matsko at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Lute
    Maleki at OEwaves Inc. in Pasadena, Calif., and Krzysztof Sacha at
    Jagiellonian University in Poland.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    University_of_California_-_Riverside. Original written by Holly
    Ober. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Hossein Taheri, Andrey B. Matsko, Lute Maleki, Krzysztof Sacha. All-
    optical dissipative discrete time crystals. Nature Communications,
    2022; 13 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28462-x ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220214183323.htm

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