Time Crystals

Reference:


http://arxiv.org/pdf/1202.2539.pdf


And a companion paper…


http://arxiv.org/pdf/1202.2537.pdf




It sounds like the title of a bad fantasy movie — time crystals — but it
could be the next big thing in theoretical physics which might be worth the
time and pain to rap one’s mind around this new weird subject.

Those who are interested in zero point energy should expand their interest
to include time crystals as a motive principle in the weird and
unexplained... ideas possibly related to the realm of perpetual motion
machines.

In two new papers, Nobel Prize–winning physicist Frank Wilczek lays out the
mathematics of how an object moving in its lowest zero point energy state
could experience a sort of structure in time. Such a “time crystal” would
be the temporal equivalent of an everyday crystal, in which atoms occupy
positions that repeat periodically in space.

The work, done partly with physicist Alfred Shapere of the University of
Kentucky, appeared in part on February 12 in arXiv.org.

“We don’t know whether such things do exist in nature, but the surprise is
that they can exist,” says Maulik Parikh, a physicist at Arizona State
University in Tempe.

Like Murphy Law states: "If it can happen, it will happen,".

Like any new idea ,scientists don’t know how important time crystals may
turn out to be, or whether they have any practical application at all. But
Wilczek, of MIT, says the concept reminds him of the excitement he felt
when he helped describe a new class of fundamental particles, called
anyons, in the early 1980s. “I had very much the same kind of feeling as
I’m having here,” he says, “that I had a found a new logical possibility
for how matter might behave that opened up a new world with many possible
directions.”

Wilczek dreamed up time crystals after teaching a class about classifying
crystals in three dimensions and wondering why that structure couldn’t
extend to the fourth dimension — time.

To visualize a time crystal, think of Earth looping back to its same
location in space every 365¼ days; the planet repeats itself periodically
as it moves through time. But a true time crystal is made not of a planet
but of an object in its lowest energy state affected by zero point energy,
like an electron stripped of all possible energy; zero point matter is you
please.

This object could endlessly loop in time, just as electrons in a
superconductor could theoretically flow through space for all eternity.
“It’s doing what it wants to do, and what it wants to do is move,” says
Wilczek.

In a sense the time crystal would be a perpetual motion machine: If
scientists could build one in a lab, it would run forever. Yet it wouldn’t
violate the second law of thermodynamics because the crystal would be in
its lowest energy state; no useful energy could be extracted from it.

Wilczek is already dreaming of extending the time crystal concept into
imaginary time, a theoretical concept of the fourth dimension that runs in
a different direction than the one people experience.

“I don’t know if this will be of lasting value at all,” he says, “but I’m
having fun.”

And like frank, all we want to do here is have some fun.

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