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Time Crystals Are Here, So What Does That Mean?

Time Crystals Are Here, So What Does That Mean?

Physicists have created a phase of matter that breaks traditionally held laws of physics regarding linear time.

We’re all familiar, and many of us enamored, with crystals and their beautiful, repeating patterns. The elegance of nature and its use of mathematics to create aesthetically pleasing and often useful forms of matter is inherent in crystalline structures. Crystals, as we know them, occupy 3-dimensional space in a rigid, periodic way. But what if there was a crystal that occupied a 4th dimension… time.

Time crystals, though once a seemingly flawed theoretical concept, have now been physically proven to exist. Their existence is yet another product of the study of quantum physics – mind-blowing discoveries in a field that is incredibly hard to comprehend, but whose applications are revolutionary. So, what exactly is a time crystal and what can it do for us?

waves in grey agate structure

Breaking Symmetry

The concept of time crystals was theorized by a physicist named Frank Wilczek. Crystals as we know them occupy space periodically in three dimensions. Wilczek believed that in the quantum world the periodicity of crystals could be extended into a 4th dimension, time. For time crystals to be a thing, Wilczek predicted that they would have to spontaneously break what is called, time-translation symmetry.

Time is thought of as being symmetrical in that probability of an occurrence or the laws of physics in general are the same throughout time, essentially time moves through a common interval. Regular crystals break spatial symmetry spontaneously in their existence by repeating physical patterns in space. So, can time crystals break the symmetry of time we perceive it? Apparently, the answer is yes, but how?

How Does a Time Crystal Work?

The term ‘prefer’ often comes up when time crystals are described. 3-dimensional crystals prefer certain areas in space, breaking what’s called spatial translational symmetry. So, time crystals prefer certain areas in space in the same way, but they also prefer certain intervals in time.

Time crystals never reach thermal equilibrium, it’s like something that’s being heated and cooled at the same time. They’re a state of matter that could lead to a whole non-equilibrium phase realm of matter that is new and profound to scientists. When scientists induce this state to create a time crystal, they use lasers and magnets to create a state of non-equilibrium, which basically causes atomic particles to spin in perpetual motion.

Once this state is induced, the particles don’t act as one would expect them to, given our concept of time. In one experiment, given a certain amount of energy, the atoms that were put into non-equilibrium responded with half the amount of energy than was being put into them. One analogy to explain this was that it was like hitting piano keys twice a second and only having notes come out once per second. Or another way of thinking of it is if your jumping rope and for every two times your hand spins, the rope only spins once, and it can’t be forced to move otherwise.

rope jumping in the open

Quantum Leaps

While Wilzcek theorized time crystals, a physicist from UC Berkley, named Norman Yao, formulated a plan for actually creating them. But it was two teams of physicists from Harvard and the University of Maryland that brought time crystals into fruition. The teams physically proved the crystals’ existence using two different methods. The team in Maryland levitated ytterbium ions with a magnetic field and then shot lasers at its atomic particles, causing them to spin. The Harvard team used the center of a diamond as their medium and microwaves as their stimulant to make particles spin and induce non-equilibrium.

So, what is the practical application of a time crystal you might ask? While distorting time to travel back thousands of years to see if the Annunaki really ruled over ancient civilizations sounds like the obvious choice, it’s not that simple. Nor is a more practical function like a perpetual energy generator. But quantum physics has never been simple. Physicists still don’t what the practical functions of time crystals are except for their go-to answer – they’ll be great for memory purposes in quantum computers. Hopefully those quantum computers turn out to either be time machines.



Can You Really Charge a Crystal to Resonate Positive Energy?

It’s rare to have figured out and planned your career path in childhood, let alone a career within a niche subset of a scientific field, but that is exactly what Marcel Vogel did, having synthesized phosphors at the age of 12. In adulthood, he became a successful researcher for IBM with over 100 patents before he produced his seminal invention, the eponymous “Vogel Crystal,” used for dowsing, healing, and myriad metaphysical purposes.

Vogel had a near-death experience after suffering pneumonia at age six. After being pronounced dead, he was revived saying he experienced love and light while his heart stopped. This caused Vogel to struggle to assimilate back and reconcile with his life afterward. He soon found himself on an existential journey to which he found the answer after extensive praying. He said a voice told him he would be a phosphor chemist and make advancements in luminescence, a path he diligently followed.

Vogel worked for IBM for 27 years, creating the magnetic coating for hard disks used in all IBM computers — an invention that came to him in a dream. But it wasn’t until he was exposed to the work of Cleve Backster and his paper, “Do Plants Have Emotions?” that Vogel switched his focus of study to the power of crystals for spiritual use.

 

marcel vogel pri lab 1985

Source: marcelvogel.org

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