By ANDY FLEMING
Quantum mechanically, mass can be used to
measure time and vice versa.
Ever since he was a kid growing up in Germany,
Holger Müller has been asking himself a fundamental question: What is time?
That question has now led Müller, today an
assistant professor of physics at the University of California, Berkeley, to a
fundamentally new way of measuring time.
Taking advantage of the fact that, in nature,
matter can be both a particle and a wave, he has discovered a way to tell time
by counting the oscillations of a matter wave. A matter wave’s frequency is 10
billion times higher than that of visible light.
“A rock is a clock, so to speak,” Müller said.
Müller and his UC Berkeley colleagues describe how to tell time using
only the matter wave of a caesium atom. He refers to his method as a Compton
clock because it is based on the so-called Compton frequency of a matter wave.
“When I was very young and reading science
books, I always wondered why there was so little explanation of what time is,”
said Müller, who is also a guest scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory. “Since then, I’ve often asked myself, ‘What is the simplest thing
that can measure time, the simplest system that feels the passage of time?’ Now
we have an upper limit: one single massive particle is enough.”
While Müller’s Compton clock is still 100
million times less precise than today’s best atomic clocks, which employ aluminium
ions, improvements in the technique could boost its precision to that of atomic
clocks, including the caesium clocks now used to define the second, he said.
“This is a beautiful experiment and cleverly
designed, but it is going to be controversial and hotly debated,” said John
Close, a quantum physicist at The Australian National University in Canberra.
“The question is, ‘Is the Compton frequency of atoms a clock or not a clock?’
Holger’s point is now made. It is a clock. I’ve made one, it works.”
Müller welcomes debate, since his experiment
deals with a basic concept of quantum mechanics – the wave-particle duality of
matter – that has befuddled students for nearly 90 years.
“We are talking about some really fundamental
ideas,” Close said. “The discussion will create a deeper understanding of
quantum physics.”
Müller can also turn the technique around to use
time to measure mass. The reference mass today is a platinum-iridium cylinder
defined as weighing one kilogram and kept under lock and key in a vault in
France, with precise copies sparingly dispersed around the world. Using
Müller’s matter wave technique provides a new way for researchers to build
their own kilogram reference.
De Broglie’s “crazy” idea
The idea that matter can be viewed as a wave was
the subject of the 1924 Ph.D. thesis by Louis de Broglie, who took Albert
Einstein’s idea that mass and energy are equivalent (E=mc2) and combined it
with Ernst Planck’s idea that every energy is associated with a frequency. De
Broglie’s idea that matter can act as a wave was honoured with the Nobel Prize
in Physics in 1929.
Using matter as a clock, however, seemed
far-fetched because the frequency of the wave, called the Compton, or de
Broglie, frequency, might be unobservable. And even if it could be seen, the
oscillations would be too fast to measure.
Müller, however, found a way two years ago to
use matter waves to confirm Einstein’s gravitational redshift – that is, that
time slows down in a gravitational field. To do this, he built an atom
interferometer that treats atoms as waves and measures their interference.
“At that time, I thought that this very, very
specialized application of matter waves as clocks was it,” Müller said. “When
you make a grandfather clock, there is a pendulum and clockwork that counts the
pendulum oscillations. So you need something that swings and clockwork to make
a clock. There was no way to make clockwork for matter waves, because their
oscillation frequency is 10 billion times higher than even the oscillations of
visible light.”
One morning last year, however, he realized that
he might be able to combine two well-known techniques to create such clockwork
and explicitly demonstrate that the Compton frequency of a single particle is,
in fact, useful as a reference for a clock. In relativity, time slows down for
moving objects, so that a twin who flies off to a distant star and returns will
be younger than the twin who stayed behind. This is the so-called twin paradox.
Similarly, a caesium atom that moves away and
then returns is younger than one that stands still. As a result, the moving caesium
matter wave will have oscillated fewer times. The difference frequency, which
would be around 100,000 fewer oscillations per second out of 10 million billion
billion oscillations (3 x 1025 for a caesium atom), might be measurable.
In the lab, Müller showed that he could measure
this difference by allowing the matter waves of the fixed and moving caesium
atoms to interfere in an atom interferometer. The motion was caused by bouncing
photons from a laser off the caesium atoms. Using an optical frequency comb, he
synchronized the laser beam in the interferometer with the difference frequency
between the matter waves so that all frequencies were referenced solely to the
matter wave itself.
Compton clocks and Avogadro spheres
Müller’s proposal to make a mass standard based
on time provides a new way to realize plans by the international General
Conference on Weights and Measures to replace the standard kilogram with a more
fundamental measure. It will involve an incredibly pure crystal of silicon,
dubbed an Avogadro sphere, which is manufactured so precisely that the number
of atoms inside is known to high accuracy.
And what about the question, What is time?
Müller says that “I don’t think that anyone will ever have a final answer, but
we know a bit more about its properties. Time is physical as soon as there is
one massive particle, but it definitely is something that doesn’t require more
than one massive particle for its existence. We know that a massless particle,
like a photon, is not sufficient.”
Müller hopes to push his technique to even
smaller particles, such as electrons or even positrons, in the latter case
creating an antimatter clock. He is hopeful that someday he’ll be able to tell
time using quantum fluctuations in a vacuum.
Original Source: University of California at
Berkeley


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