Scientists create 'slits in time' in mind-bending physics experiment

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Scientists create 'slits in time' in mind-bending physics experiment​

Researchers replicated the classic double slit experiment using lasers, but their slits are in time not space.

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A new diffracton study sends lasers through 'slits in time' in a novel take on the classic double slit experiment.

In a first, scientists have shown that they can send light through "slits" in time.

The new experiment is a twist on a 220-year-old demonstration, in which light shines through two slits in a screen to create a unique diffraction pattern across space, where the peaks and troughs of the light wave add up or cancel out. In the new experiment, researchers created a similar pattern in time, essentially changing the color of an ultrabrief laser pulse.

The findings pave the way for advances in analog computers that manipulate data imprinted on beams of light instead of digital bits - it might even make such computers "learn" from the data. They also deepen our understanding of the fundamental nature of light and its interactions with materials.

For the new study, described April 3 in the journal Nature Physics, the researchers used indium tin oxide (ITO), the material found in most phone screens. Scientists already knew ITO could change from transparent to reflective in response to light, but the researchers found it occurs much faster than previously thought, in less than 10 femtoseconds (10 millionths of a billionth of a second).

"This was a very big surprise and at the beginning it was something that we couldn’t explain," study lead author Riccardo Sapienza (opens in new tab), a physicist at the Imperial College London, told Live Science. Eventually, the researchers figured out why the reaction happened so fast by scrutinizing the theory of how the electrons in ITO respond to incident light. "But it took us a long time to understand it."

Time swapping in for space​

English scientist Thomas Young first demonstrated light's wave-like nature using the now classic "double-slit" experiment in 1801. As light shines on a screen with two slits, the waves change direction, so that waves fanning out from one slit overlap with the waves coming through the other. The peaks and troughs of these waves either add up or cancel out, creating bright and dark fringes, called an interference pattern.

In the new study, Sapienza and colleagues recreated such an interference pattern in time by shining a "pump" laser pulse at a screen coated in ITO. While the ITO was initially transparent, the light from the laser changed the properties of the electrons within the material so that the ITO reflected light like a mirror. A subsequent "probe" laser beam hitting the ITO screen would then see this temporary change in optical properties as a slit in time just a few hundred femtoseconds long. Using a second pump laser pulse made the material behave as if it had two slits in time, an analog of light passing through spatial double slits.

Whereas passing through conventional spatial slits causes light to change direction and fan out, as the light passed through these twin "time slits," it changed in frequency, which is inversely related to its wavelength. It is the wavelength of visible light that determines its color.

In the new experiment, the interference pattern showed up as fringes, or additional peaks in the frequency spectra, which are graphs of the measured light intensity at different frequencies. Just like altering the distance between spatial slits changes the resulting interference pattern, the lag between the time slits dictates the spacing of the interference fringes in the frequency spectra. And the number of fringes in these interference patterns that are visible before their amplitude decreases to the level of background noise reveals how quickly the ITO properties are changing; materials with slower responses yield fewer detectable interference fringes.

This isn't the first time that scientists have figured out how to manipulate light across time, rather than space. For instance, scientists at Google say their quantum computer "Sycamore" created a time crystal, a new phase of matter that changes periodically in time, as opposed to atoms being arranged in a periodic pattern across space.

Andrea Alù, a physicist at The City University of New York who was not involved with these experiments but has done separate experiments that created reflections of light in time, described it as yet another“neat demonstration” of how time and space can be interchangeable..

"The most remarkable aspect of the experiment is that it demonstrates how we can switch the permittivity [which defines how much a material transmits or reflects light] of this material (ITO) very fast, and by a significant amount," Alù told Live Science via email. "This confirms that this material can be an ideal candidate for the demonstration of time reflections and time crystals."

The researchers hope to use these phenomena to create metamaterials, or structures designed to alter the path of light in specific and often sophisticated ways.

So far these metamaterials have been static, meaning changing how the metamaterial affects light’s path requires using a whole new metamaterial structure — a new analog computer for each different type of calculation, for instance, Sapienza said.

"Now we have a material we can reconfigure, which means we can use it for more than one purpose," said Sapienza. He added that such technology could enable neuromorphic computing that mimics the brain.
 
Oh boy, now some brave time traveler is going to have to fix these rifts -- or "slits" as they were christened -- in the fabric of time.
 
With rot setting in all institutions, on top of physics having essentially stagnated for the last odd decades, I can only help but wonder if this is more fancy sounding bullshit to get lab funding and feed further into the institution-wide Replication Crisis.
 
With rot setting in all institutions, on top of physics having essentially stagnated for the last odd decades, I can only help but wonder if this is more fancy sounding bullshit to get lab funding and feed further into the institution-wide Replication Crisis.
The answer is yes.
 
With rot setting in all institutions, on top of physics having essentially stagnated for the last odd decades, I can only help but wonder if this is more fancy sounding bullshit to get lab funding and feed further into the institution-wide Replication Crisis.
Hey... they're identifying as slits and these people are identifying as scientists.
 
I’m still not sure I understand how the pulse creates a slit in time, but sounds fun
 
I just want to be able to see a wormhole happen in real time. Anything that gets us closer to understanding how wormholes operate is a plus in my book.
 
I’m still not sure I understand how the pulse creates a slit in time, but sounds fun
Yeah, I think what they are saying is this reaction is happening way faster than should be possible, and calling it time travel.

One proven version that would work for travelling forward in time is a hyperloop. The atomic clock experiment proved the theory is sound. If I ever become a billionaire, I'd definitely try and make one. If it works, I want to deport all niggers to the future.
 
With rot setting in all institutions, on top of physics having essentially stagnated for the last odd decades, I can only help but wonder if this is more fancy sounding bullshit to get lab funding and feed further into the institution-wide Replication Crisis.
I'm no scientist, but all of it together just sounds like very padded-out and fanciful bullshit for what amounts to "lasers and shit".
 
This had fuckall to do with time. They shot a laser through a medium coated with a material that could be altered to block the light, then they used other lasers to turn the blocking on or off and it happened so quickly that it behaved like shooting lasers through two separate holes. This may have valuable implications, but is not remotely related to anything with altering or moving around in time. They were completely hyping up their experiment with "time slits" in the hopes that normies wouldn't bother reading what they were actually doing and would hype them up. Which, to be fair, if I was in the science gig, I would totally do too. I'd be naming any old thing "quantum destabilizers" and shit, regardless of what it actually did.
 
This had fuckall to do with time. They shot a laser through a medium coated with a material that could be altered to block the light, then they used other lasers to turn the blocking on or off and it happened so quickly that it behaved like shooting lasers through two separate holes. This may have valuable implications, but is not remotely related to anything with altering or moving around in time. They were completely hyping up their experiment with "time slits" in the hopes that normies wouldn't bother reading what they were actually doing and would hype them up. Which, to be fair, if I was in the science gig, I would totally do too. I'd be naming any old thing "quantum destabilizers" and shit, regardless of what it actually did.
The second I actually fucking read the thing I was like "oh this is the same bullshit as the fucking recent claims on social media with mirror reflections being some sort of new groundbreaking physics altering discovery but with more science jargin"
JUST BECAUSE YOUR EXPENSIVE FUCKING COMPUTER IS FUCKING CALLED A "QUANTUM COMPUTER" DOESN'T MEAN YOU'RE SENDING SLITS IN TIME BY BLOCKING LIGHT DUMBASS
 
The findings pave the way for advances in analog computers that manipulate data imprinted on beams of light instead of digital bits -
...isn't that roughly what fiber optic-communication is? Why not just call it that? It's still all bits, but it's not electricity.

it might even make such computers "learn" from the data.
Are you talking about machine learning? That's independent of the medium of data transmission.

Scienceless hands wrote this article.
 
...isn't that roughly what fiber optic-communication is? Why not just call it that? It's still all bits, but it's not electricity.
Strictly speaking, fiber optics deals only with the transmission of a light signal through a certain type of waveguide. Manipulating that signal in a useful way, without transducing it into an electronic one, falls under the domain of photonic computing. It's much faster than electronic computing, because your data is moving at the speed of light, but the tradeoff is that the components have to be much larger due to the diffraction limit.
 
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