一种全新的时间测量方法

Physicists Found an Entirely
New Way of Measuring Time
By Mike McRae
Determining the passage of time in our world of ticking clocks
and oscillating pendulums is a simple case of counting the seconds
between 'then' and 'now'.
Down at the quantum scale of buzzing electrons, however,
'then' can't always be anticipated. Worse still, 'now' often blurs
into a haze of vagueness. A stopwatch simply isn't going to work
for some scenarios.
A potential solution could be found in the very shape of the
quantum fog itself, according to a 2022 study by researchers from
Uppsala University in Sweden.
Their experiments on the wave-like nature of something called
a Rydberg state revealed a novel way to measure time that doesn't
require a precise starting point.
Rydberg atoms are the over-inflated balloons of the particle
kingdom. Puffed up with lasers instead of air, these atoms contain
electrons in extremely high energy states, orbiting far from the
nucleus.
Of course, not every pump of a laser needs to puff an atom up
to cartoonish proportions. In fact, lasers are routinely used to
tickle electrons into higher energy states for a variety of
uses.
In some applications, a second laser can be used to monitor
the changes in the electron's position, including the passing of
time. These 'pump-probe' techniques can be used to measure the
speed of certain ultrafast electronics, for instance.
Inducing atoms into Rydberg states is a handy trick for
engineers, not least when it comes to designing novel components
for quantum computers. Needless to say, physicists have amassed a
significant amount of information about the way electrons move
about when nudged into a Rydberg state.
Being quantum animals, though, their movements are less like
beads sliding about on a tiny abacus, and more like an evening at
the roulette table, where every roll and jump of the ball is
squeezed into a single game of chance.
The mathematical rule book behind this wild game of Rydberg
electron roulette is referred to as a Rydberg wave packet.
Just like actual waves, having more than one Rydberg wave
packet rippling about in a space creates interference, resulting in
unique patterns of ripples.
Throw enough Rydberg wave packets into the same atomic pond,
and those unique patterns will each represent the distinct time it
takes for the wave packets to evolve in accordance with one
another.
It was these very 'fingerprints' of time that the physicists
behind this set of experiments set out to test, showing they were
consistent and reliable enough to serve as a form of quantum
timestamping.
Their research involved measuring the results of laser-excited
helium atoms and matching their findings with theoretical
predictions to show how their signature results could stand in for
a duration of time.
"If you're using a counter, you have to define zero. You start
counting at some point," physicist Marta Berholts from the
University of Uppsala in Sweden, who led the team, explained to New
Scientist in 2022.
"The benefit of this is that you don't have to start the clock
– you just look at the interference structure and say 'okay, it's
been 4 nanoseconds.'"
A guidebook of evolving Rydberg wave packets could be used in
combination with other forms of pump-probe spectroscopy that
measure events on a tiny scale, when now and then are less clear,
or simply too inconvenient to measure.
Importantly, none of the fingerprints require a then and now
to serve as a starting and stopping point for time. It'd be like
measuring an unknown sprinter's race against a number of
competitors running at set speeds.
By looking for the signature of interfering Rydberg states
amid a sample of pump-probe atoms, technicians could observe a
timestamp for events as fleeting as just 1.7 trillionths of a
second.
Future quantum watch experiments could replace helium with
other atoms, or even use laser pulses of different energies, to
broaden the guidebook of timestamps to suit a broader range of
conditions.