http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150616102353.htm

 

Quantum theory: Einstein saves the quantum cat

 

Date: June 16, 2015

Source: University of Vienna

[snip]

 

In 1915 [[[100 years ago!]]] Albert Einstein formulated the theory of general 
relativity which fundamentally changed our understanding of gravity. He 
explained gravity as the manifestation of the curvature of space and time. 
Einstein's theory predicts that the flow of time is altered by mass. This 
effect, known as "gravitational time dilation," causes time to be slowed down 
near a massive object. It affects everything and everybody; in fact, people 
working on the ground floor will age slower than their colleagues a floor 
above, by about 10 nanoseconds in one year. This tiny effect has actually been 
confirmed in many experiments with very precise clocks. Now, a team of 
researchers from the University of Vienna, Harvard University and the 
University of Queensland have discovered that the slowing down of time can 
explain another perplexing phenomenon: the transition from quantum behavior to 
our classical, everyday world.

 

How gravity suppresses quantum behavior

 

Quantum theory, the other major discovery in physics in the early 20th century, 
predicts that the fundamental building blocks of nature show fascinating and 
mind-boggling behavior. Extrapolated to the scales of our everyday life quantum 
theory leads to situations such as the famous example of Schroedinger's cat: 
the cat is neither dead nor alive, but in a so-called quantum superposition of 
both. Yet such a behavior has only been confirmed experimentally with small 
particles and has never been observed with real-world cats. Therefore, 
scientists conclude that something must cause the suppression of quantum 
phenomena on larger, everyday scales. Typically this happens because of 
interaction with other surrounding particles.

 

The research team, headed by Caslav Brukner from the University of Vienna and 
the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, found that time 
dilation also plays a major role in the demise of quantum effects. They 
calculated that once the small building blocks form larger, composite objects 
-- such as molecules and eventually larger structures like microbes or dust 
particles -, the time dilation on Earth can cause a suppression of their 
quantum behavior. The tiny building blocks jitter ever so slightly, even as 
they form larger objects. And this jitter is affected by time dilation: it is 
slowed down on the ground and speeds up at higher altitudes. The researchers 
have shown that this effect destroys the quantum superposition and, thus, 
forces larger objects to behave as we expect in everyday life.

 

Paving the way for the next generation of quantum experiments

 

"It is quite surprising that gravity can play any role in quantum mechanics," 
says Igor Pikovski, who is the lead author of the publication and is now 
working at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics: "Gravity is usually 
studied on astronomical scales, but it seems that it also alters the quantum 
nature of the smallest particles on Earth." "It remains to be seen what the 
results imply on cosmological scales, where gravity can be much stronger," adds 
Brukner. The results of Pikovski and his co-workers reveal how larger particles 
lose their quantum behavior due to their own composition, if one takes time 
dilation into account. This prediction should be observable in experiments in 
the near future, which could shed some light on the fascinating interplay 
between the two great theories of the 20th century, quantum theory and general 
relativity.

 

Story Source:

 

The above post is reprinted from  
<http://medienportal.univie.ac.at/presse/aktuelle-pressemeldungen/detailansicht/artikel/einstein-saves-the-quantum-cat/>
 materials provided by  <http://www.univie.ac.at/en/> University of Vienna.

 

Journal Reference:

 

Igor Pikovski, Magdalena Zych, Fabio Costa, Časlav Brukner. Universal 
decoherence due to gravitational time dilation. Nature Physics, 2015; DOI:  
<http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nphys3366> 10.1038/nphys3366

 

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