
Time Crystals!
Season 3 Episode 17 | 9m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
What exactly are space crystals?
In this episode of the Space Time Journal Club Matt discusses how two independent research teams created their own Time Crystals, a form of matter that breaks time translational symmetry and could be used in quantum computers.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback

Time Crystals!
Season 3 Episode 17 | 9m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
In this episode of the Space Time Journal Club Matt discusses how two independent research teams created their own Time Crystals, a form of matter that breaks time translational symmetry and could be used in quantum computers.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipWhat exactly are time crystals?
Are they the bling inside your time turner, the flux in your flux capacitor?
Are they the heart of the Tardis?
In today's edition of "Space Time Journal Club," we find out.
[MUSIC PLAYING] 12 00:00:23,840 --> 00:00:27,200 In "Space Time Journal Club," we review new scientific papers that are making waves.
We pick them apart to turn the technobabble into simple English, at least as much as is possible.
Then we fight about it in the comments.
This week, we're going to take a look at a recent publication by Norman Yao et al.
in physical review letters, entitled "Discreet Time Crystals: Rigidity, Criticality, and Realizations."
This paper proposed an approach to making these bizarre objects, a recipe that two other research teams have now followed and have actually synthesized these things.
But first up, what on earth are time crystals?
The idea was first proposed in 2012 by Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek of MIT.
He suggested a type of matter that exhibits a sort of fundamental oscillation over time.
So some property of the material goes through a repeating cycle, but how does that make it a time crystal?
The analogy is that regular crystals have a periodic cycle through space.
Molecular patterns repeat again and again along their lattices.
Time crystals repeat some internal state with constant separations in time.
The name time crystal is somewhat out there, but Wilczek wasn't the first to use it in reference to a regularly repeating system.
That may have been Arthur Winfree in his "The Geometry of Biological Time," where it's used to describe periodic biological systems.
But Wilczek was clever to apply it here, because the name made the internet go completely bonkers.
And so here we are.
Wilczek came up with a simple model in which charged particles in a superconducting ring break what we call continuous time translational symmetry.
That's a fancy way of saying that the system looks different on a global level from one instant to the next.
Normal matter that is in what we call thermal equilibrium only has random internal motion.
In solid matter, that would be the vibrational buzz of its constituent atoms.
But from one instant to the next, that buzz stays random.
In regular matter in equilibrium, statistical properties stay the same over time.
Wilczek's imaginary system broke this time translational symmetry, because there are global statistical differences in the state of the matter, non-random patterns that change over time.
Big deal.
Lots of things change over time.
Cups of coffee cool down, planets orbit the sun, the universe expands.
But cups of coffee in the universe are not in equilibrium, and the planets are macroscopic moving objects.
Wilczek proposed an actual substance that was in perpetual motion while in equilibrium.
More, he imagined a substance for which oscillations were the most fundamental lowest energy or ground states.
This would break time translational symmetry, which makes most physicists nervous.
Well, physicists can chill.
In 2015, Haruki Watanabe of UC Berkeley and Masaki Oshikawa of the University of Tokyo showed from theoretical arguments that time translational symmetry can't be broken by a quantum system in equilibrium.
That sounds bad for time crystals, but that's where this new paper by Yao et al.
comes in.
Their answer is to throw away this equilibrium thing.
Thermal equilibrium means a closed system.
No energy in, no energy out.
Norman Yao, also at UC Berkeley, and his team proposed a way to make time crystals by using some sort of external input of energy to force the oscillating states.
The idea goes like this.
Set up a chain of ions, so electrically charged atoms.
These atoms have spin values, quantum mechanical angular momenta from their electrons.
Spins in nearby atoms like to line up with each other due to interacting magnetic fields.
Either direct alignment or opposite alignment are both a lower energy state than random alignment.
This is the same effect that results in magnetic materials.
So you prepare a string of ions where the line spins.
Now cause those spins to flip back and forth using a laser.
A laser is just a very well-ordered electromagnetic wave with a known period or frequency.
The spin-flip oscillation will be determined by the period of the laser.
That laser is what takes the system out of equilibrium, because you are basically pumping in energy.
Causing spins to flip in a laser isn't particularly exciting.
I mean, you're basically grabbing the electrons and forcing them to oscillate.
But the paper proposes that if you let go of the electrons, their spin oscillations should continue.
They should be sustained internally.
That means they should resist a change in the frequency of the input laser, or continue oscillating at least for a while if the input EM field is randomized.
In addition, other researchers theorized that spins should not oscillate at the same period as the laser, but at an integer multiple of the driving period.
So two, three, four, et cetera spin oscillations for every EM field oscillation in the laser.
Yao et al.
's work was theoretical, but it involved numerical calculations that allowed them to draw a phase diagram.
This is sort of like the phase diagram of regular matter in which you plot pressure versus temperature.
Different materials become solid, liquid, gas, or plasma at different locations on that phase diagram.
The analogous phase diagram for time crystals plots interaction strength between atoms versus imperfection in the spin-flip driving signal.
This triangle at the bottom is where time crystals live.
If the variations in the forcing signal become too messy and the interaction strength is too weak, then the time crystal effectively melts into regular time symmetric matter, in which the ion chain follows the rhythm of the driving signal perfectly with no independent rhythm of its own.
This right side of the graph is also interesting.
If the connections between the spins of the ions become too strong, then a wormhole forms and sends your graduate students back to the Paleocene era.
I'm kidding.
At that point, thermal effects take over and the rhythm dies.
Since Yao and team laid out a practical approach to building time crystals, in August 2016 two teams have synthesized them in the lab in completely different ways.
Chris Monroe's team at the University of Maryland followed Yao's suggestions for setting up a chain of ions, linking 10 ytterbium ions and driving them with a laser.
Mikhail Lukin's Harvard team tried something completely different.
They used microwaves to generate oscillations in the spins of nitrogen impurities inside a diamond.
A time crystal within a space crystal.
Both spin systems developed periods that were integer multiples of the drivers.
The ytterbium ions oscillations were twice the laser period.
The diamond [INAUDIBLE] three times the microwave period.
Both resisted changes in the driving period, keeping up their own rhythms.
Finally, both fit the predicted phase diagram, their time asymmetry melting when subjected to too much perturbation or too little interaction strength.
So two teams verified this result in completely different ways.
That means time crystals, at least by Yao et al.
's definition of them, can exist.
By the way, these two lab results have been submitted to journals, but as of the filming of this "Journal Club," the peer review isn't complete.
I should also add that while their systems do break continuous time translational symmetry, they have a different type of symmetry-- discrete time symmetry.
That means if you shift forwards or backwards in time in steps of exactly their period, they will return to the same state.
Scientists are using the term discrete time crystals to describe such systems.
Time crystals could have their first application in quantum computing.
Perhaps the most popular approach to building a quantum computing memory element is to use electron spins, which can represent the ones and zeros of a classical computer in the up-down direction of the spin.
One of the most serious challenges is that these quantum states are really hard to maintain.
It doesn't take much random motion from heat to scramble a carefully prepared array of entangled spin alignments, completely messing up your calculation.
Time crystals with their resilient spin-flip cycle could be the next step in building stable quantum memory.
Time crystals could also help bridge the gap between quantum mechanics and general relativity.
Before this year, time stood out as a major symmetry that hadn't been broken.
And unlike in relativity, quantum mechanics treats space and time very differently to each other.
Now that we've seen matter settle into discrete lattices in time just like in regular crystals, perhaps it's a first step in a quantum union of space time.
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