A team of researchers in Europe have successfully created a
two-state system using time crystals.
The correct response to reading that is: eureka! We would
have also accepted “wow,” “OMG,” and “hooray,” given the potential implications
of this incredible breakthrough.
Up front: Time crystals are a recently discovered phase of matter. In their ground state, they oscillate between different configurations without losing or using energy.
A team of physicists led by Lancaster University’s Samuli
Autti managed to couple two time crystals together in what’s referred to as a “two-state
system,” or a “two-level system.”
As far as we can tell, this is the first time this has ever
been done. The exciting thing about this experiment is that it lays the
groundwork for quantum computers operating with time crystals as qubits.
Per the team’s peer-reviewed research paper:
In our experiments, two coupled time crystals consisting of
spin-wave quasiparticles (magnons) form a macroscopic two-level system. The two
levels evolve in time as determined intrinsically by a nonlinear feedback,
allowing us to construct spontaneous two-level dynamics.
The paper goes on to state that, in the superfluid system
they used for their experiment, “the observable time crystal life time can be
extended up to a thousand seconds.”
This seemingly props this work up as the likely foundation
and blueprint for a quantum coherent system built out of time crystals.
The reasons why we’re so excited about this are threefold:
- One of quantum computing’s toughest challenges is maintaining coherency
- Time crystals can, experimentally, be created at room temperature
- This the closest thing to a free lunch we’ve seen in quantum physics
A perpetual motion machine is something that, theoretically,
could produce energy without consuming any. As far as we know, this doesn’t
exist. But, if it did, it would defy the laws of classical physics. And, it
would also eliminate the need for “fuel” or external power requirements.
If we could build a perpetual motion machine, it’s possible
we could use it to power our world for free.
The Lancaster team’s work touches on the idea of a free
lunch (perpetual motion machine) because time crystals, linked together, can
function as an extremely low-power qubit.
Lead author Autti described the concept in an interview with
ScienceAlert’s Michelle Starr:
Everybody knows that perpetual motion machines are
impossible. However, in quantum physics perpetual motion is okay as long as we
keep our eyes closed. By sneaking through this crack we can make time crystals.
By “keep our eyes closed,” we assume Autti’s referring to
the fact that time crystals, like nearly everything in the quantum world, can’t
really be directly observed.
Regardless, a free lunch sure would be something to see. And
this research potentially brings us closer than we’ve ever been to it.
The promise of quantum computing at future-scale underwrites
nearly every theoretical technology we aspire to one day create. Teleportation
machines, warp drives, cold fusion, extended human lives, planet-scale
terraforming, Dyson Spheres, and countless other fantasy-fodder staples could
go from science fiction to actuation if we build sufficiently capable quantum
computing systems.
Who knows? Maybe one day a team of researchers will figure
out how to harness the power of time crystals with nothing but a tiny, one-time
pulse of energy — not quite lunch, but maybe the universe’s version of a free
bread basket.
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