*Physicists Recreated the Famous Double-Slit Experiment Using Time Instead
of Space*

More than 200 years ago, the English scientist Thomas Young carried out a
famous test known as the “double-slit experiment
<https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstl.1804.0001>.” He shone
a beam of light at a screen with two slits in it, and observed that the
light that passed through the apertures formed a pattern of dark and bright
bands.

At the time, the experiment was understood to demonstrate that light was a
wave. The “interference pattern” is caused by light waves passing through
both slits and interfering with each other on the other side, producing
bright bands where the peaks of the two waves line up and dark bands where
a peak meets a trough and the two cancel out.

In the 20th century, physicists realized the experiment could be adapted to
demonstrate that light not only behaves like a wave, but also like a
particle (called a photon). In quantum mechanical theory, this particle
still has wave properties—so the wave associated with even a single photon
passes through both slits, and creates interference.

In a new twist on the classic experiment, we replaced the slits in the
screen with “slits” in time—and discovered a new kind of interference
pattern. Our results were published this week
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-023-01993-w> in *Nature Physics.*

Slits in Time

Our team, led by Riccardo Sapienza at Imperial College London, fired light
through a material that changes its properties in femtoseconds
(quadrillionths of a second), only allowing light to pass through at
specific times in quick succession.

We still saw interference patterns, but instead of showing up as bands of
bright and dark, they showed up as changes in the frequency or color of the
beams of light.

To carry out our experiment, we devised a way to switch on and off the
reflectivity of a screen incredibly quickly. We had a transparent screen
that became a mirror for two brief instants, creating the equivalent of two
slits in time.

Color Interference

So what do these slits in time do to light? If we think of light as a
particle, a photon sent at this screen might be reflected by the first
increase of reflectivity or by the second, and reach a detector.

However, the wave nature of the process means the photon is in a sense
reflected by both temporal slits. This creates interference, and a varying
pattern of color in the light that reaches the detector.

The amount of change in color is related to how fast the mirror changes its
reflectivity. These changes must be on timescales comparable with the
length of a single cycle of a light-wave, which is measured in
*femtoseconds.*

Electronic devices cannot function quickly enough for this. So we had to
use light to switch on and off the reflectivity of our screen.

We took a screen of indium tin oxide, a transparent material used in mobile
phone screens, and made it reflective with a brief pulse of laser light.

>From Space to Time

Our experiment is a beautiful demonstration of wave physics, and also shows
how we can transfer concepts such as interference from the domain of space
to the domain of time.

The experiment has also helped us in understanding materials that can
minutely control the behavior of light in space and time. This will have
applications in signal processing and perhaps even light-powered computers.

 KR IRS 22423

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