Team Led by Brazilian Physical Confirms Arrow Time in Atomic Level.
Hello reader!
Below is an article published the day (16/12) in the website of the "Agency FAPESP", noting that international team led by Brazilian Physical
confirms Arrow Time
in atomic level.
Duda Falcão
News
Proof of Time’s Arrow at The Atomic Level
By Peter Moon
Agência FAPESP
December 16, 2015
(Image: APS/Alan Stonebraker)
The
universe in which we live has two fundamental and immutable properties: the
arrow of time and increasing entropy. These features are so inherent in
our day-to-day lives that we almost never stop to think about them.
Time’s arrow
refers to the irreversible flow of time from past to present and into the
future. Entropy refers to growing disorder or chaos in the universe, which
began as an infinitely small, hot, and dense point at the Big Bang and since
then has expanded in an increasingly chaotic manner, forming gas clouds,
galaxies, stars, planets, and eventually life, with no turning back.
Physicists
have tested and confirmed the arrow of time and the increase in entropy in
various environments and situations, but always macroscopically. Until
recently, time’s arrow in connection with entropy had never been verified at
the microscopic or quantum scale, i.e., at the level of atoms. In the
microscopic world, the emergence of irreversibility intrigues physicists
because the laws of quantum mechanics have no preferred direction in time: they
do not distinguish between time’s arrow and its reverse, a return to the past.
This apparent
incompatibility between time’s preferred direction and the microscopic laws of
physics has fueled many a debate for decades. More controversy is likely as a
result of a scientific article recently published in Physical Review Letters.
The paper
details the results of a pioneering experiment performed by Brazilian, Irish
and German physicists, proving for the first time that time’s arrow and its
intrinsic relationship with entropy also occur in an isolated quantum system.
The researchers did this by studying the nuclear spin of carbon-13 atoms in
chloroform molecules. Spin in this context is a magnetic property analogous to
that of a compass needle.
The experiment
was performed in the laboratories of the Brazilian Center for Research in
Physics (CBPF), in Rio de Janeiro, and the findings are associated with
research conducted by the National Science & Technology Institute for
Quantum Information (INCT-IQ),
supported by FAPESP and the National Scientific & Technological Development
Council (CNPq).
The
researchers used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to verify the emergence of
time’s arrow in a microscopic environment, according to one of the authors of
the article, physicist Roberto Menezes Serra, a professor at the Federal
University of the ABC (UFABC) in Santo André, São Paulo State.
Because
quantum systems have very low energy, the carbon-13 atoms were supercooled to
273.15°C, just above absolute zero, and submitted to a radiofrequency pulse.
The intensity of this RF pulse was modulated in time at a frequency of 125 MHz,
similar to that of FM radio waves. “The temperature of our system is known as
spin temperature, and the spin lasted for fractions of a second during the
experiment,” Serra said.
When the
chilled nuclear spins interacted with radio waves at increasing intensities,
they changed state and their internal energy rose. This rise occurred so fast
that part of the energy absorbed by the spins became disorganized, like a
wobble.
The process
can be compared to the motion of a piston in an automotive engine as the gas
released by fuel combustion expands in the cylinder.
When the RF
pulse was switched off, part of the energy absorbed by the carbon atoms (the
disorganized part) had to dissipate into the environment in the form of heat.
The system then returned to its original state of thermal equilibrium.
To reveal the
arrow of time, the strategy used in the experiment entailed switching the radio
waves on and off very quickly at intervals of milliseconds. “We performed the
procedure so fast that there was no time for the system to exchange energy with
the environment in the form of heat,” Serra said. Thus, the researchers
detected the production of entropy in a quantum system and observed how it
increased at this microscopic scale.
Quantum
Fluctuations
The
researchers then performed the same procedure but modulated the radio waves in
the opposite direction, reducing the energy in the waves very quickly and hence
decreasing the energy in the spin system. This can be compared to compression
of the air-fuel mixture in the pistons of a combustion engine.
When they
compared what happened to the carbon atoms’ nuclei while the energy of the
radio waves rose and fell, they detected a subtle difference. If the laws that
govern isolated quantum systems are symmetrical in time, this process should
also have been symmetrical, but the experiment pointed to moderate asymmetry.
“The asymmetry
is due to quantum fluctuations,” Serra said. Strange things happen in the
microscopic world of atoms and particles. A vacuum is far from empty, for
example. Subatomic particles can pop up in a vacuum out of nowhere. They appear
and disappear without notice, as if by magic--hence Serra’s reference to
quantum fluctuations.
In this
experiment, what the researchers detected was a similar phenomenon, in which
the fluctuations were associated with transitions between quantum states of
nuclear spin. For the sake of illustration, imagine you take a few steps in any
direction while holding a pendulum. It will continue to swing back and forth,
but it will also wobble very slightly owing to imperceptible sideways movements
as you walk.
The wobble is
analogous to the quantum fluctuations in nuclear spin when the intensity of the
radio waves was changed rapidly in the experiment.
The experiment
proved that time’s arrow exists at the quantum level because of the asymmetry
detected between what happened to nuclear spin when the energy in the radio
waves increased and what happened when it decreased, i.e., when the process was
reversed.
The asymmetry
originated in the transition between quantum states, showing entropy increasing
in the system and demonstrating the arrow of time at the microscopic scale.
However, what
is the point of all this? What practical applications could possibly flow from
showing that time’s arrow exists in a quantum system? “In the groundbreaking
experimental work we’ve done in quantum thermodynamics, our research group’s
basic aim has been to understand thermodynamic phenomena at the quantum level.
From the practical standpoint, we want to understand the limits of the new
quantum technology at this microscopic scale,” Serra said.
This is one of
the frontiers of science today. The expectation is that in the long run it will
lead to the development of quantum computers, which will be many times more
powerful than today’s computers. Another dividend will be quantum cryptography,
with unbreakable codes and security assured by the laws of quantum mechanics.
“Quantum computing is set to be one of the twenty-first century’s most important
technologies,” Serra said.
The results of
the experiment are described in the article “Irreversibility and the Arrow of
Time in a Quenched Quantum System” (doi:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.190601) by T. B. Batalhão, R. M.
Serra et al., published by Physical Review Letters
and available at http://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.190601.
Source: Website of the Agência FAPESP - http://agencia.fapesp.br/
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