• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Laser-Engorged Atoms Become A Quantum Watch In New Time Measurement Method

November 7, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Researchers have developed a quantum watch: a quantum system that has a unique way to measure time. It doesn’t need a reference time or a repeating pattern to provide a measurement of the elapsed time – and they weren’t even looking to demonstrate such a timepiece.

The easiest analogy to understand how it works would be to consider it similar to a ruler or a tape measure. In a regular watch, the time markers are down to a beat, whether mechanical or electronic, which corresponds to the smallest unit of time that the device can measure. The accumulation of its repetition gives you timing. On a ruler, every distance is written out. Your ruler is not counting how many millimeters have ever been between this point and that point. You don’t have to go and look where it started.

Advertisement

The quantum watch is like that. The time of an event doesn’t depend on a specific beat but on the evolution of a quantum system made of Rydberg atoms. This is measured by laser pulses. These atoms are a special type of excited state where electrons occupy orbitals that are much further away from the nucleus than usual. They can be used to create molecular bonds that are longer than some bacteria, and they have numerous technical applications.

The quantum watch works because it can tell how long this Rydberg state in helium atoms has lived. The state is brief for human timings – but compared to the very short intervals of time in which quantum mechanical processes happen, it would be like comparing one second to tens of millions of years.

“This is just a new way of observing time. It’s not going to beat optical atomic clocks, it is just a new way of detecting time,” co-author Johan Söderström, from Uppsala University, told IFLScience.

Advertisement

Lead author Marta Berholts, from Tartu University, conducted a lot of the data collection during the pandemic lockdowns. Having just moved to Uppsala University, and not knowing people in the country, she had lots of time to work on the experiment. The experiment itself was not about finding a quantum watch, and the team has more results to publish about the work.

“We didn’t think of the possibility that we would use it as a watch,” Söderström told IFLScience. “That is something that came out after we looked at the data with some fairly simple theoretical modeling. [The quantum watch] turned out to be surprisingly exact.”

The team has not considered if there are realistic applications for the quantum watch. Rydberg states are useful in quantum computers so there might be intriguing applications there for somebody to find.

Advertisement

The work is published in Physical Review Research. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-China’s Miniso to double U.S. stores, add NY ‘flagship’ as pandemic slashes mall rents
  2. European shares turn positive as easing U.S. inflation data offsets luxury drag
  3. Japan’s Aso urges joint monetary, fiscal policies to spur inflation
  4. Soccer-Rashford receives honorary doctorate from University of Manchester

Source Link: Laser-Engorged Atoms Become A Quantum Watch In New Time Measurement Method

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Astronomical Winter Vs. Meteorological Winter: What’s The Difference?
  • Do Any Animal Species Actively Hunt Humans As Prey?
  • “What The Heck Is This?”: JWST Reveals Bizarre Exoplanet With Inexplicable Composition
  • The Animal With The Strongest Bite Chomps Down With A Force Of Over 16,000 Newtons
  • The Eschatian Hypothesis: Why Our First Contact From Aliens May Be Particularly Bleak, And Nothing Like The Movies
  • The Great Mountain Meltdown Is Coming: We Could Reach “Peak Glacier Extinction” By 2041
  • Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Experiencing A Non-Gravitational Acceleration – What Does That Mean?
  • The First Human Ancestor To Leave Africa Wasn’t Who We Thought It Was
  • Why Do Warm Hugs Make Us Feel So Good? Here’s The Science
  • “Unidentified Human Relative”: Little Foot, One Of Most Complete Early Hominin Fossils, May Be New Species
  • Thought Arctic Foxes Only Came In White? Think Again – They Come In Beautiful Blue Too
  • COVID Shots In Pregnancy Are Safe And Effective, Cutting Risk Of Hospitalization By 60 Percent
  • Ramanujan’s Unexpected Formulas Are Still Unraveling The Mysteries Of The Universe
  • First-Ever Footage of A Squid Disguising Itself On Seafloor 4,100 Meters Below Surface
  • Your Daily Coffee Might Be Keeping You Young – Especially If You Have Poor Mental Health
  • Why Do Cats And Dogs Eat Grass?
  • What Did Carl Sagan Actually Mean When He Said “We Are All Made Of Star Stuff”?
  • Lonesome George: The Giant Tortoise Who Was The Very Last Of His Kind
  • Bermuda Sits On A Strange, 20-Kilometer-Thick Structure That’s Like No Other In The World
  • Time Moves Faster Up A Mountain – And That’s Why Earth’s Core Is 2.5 Years Younger Than Its Surface
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version