Popular Mechanics (South Africa)

HYWW: Quantum superposit­ion; make gluten-free bread with electric shocks.

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PHYSICISTS HAVE LONG struggled with a perplexing conundrum: Why do tiny particles such as atoms, photons and electrons behave in ways that bacteria, bees, and bowling balls do not? In a phenomenon called quantum superposit­ion, for example, individual units (say, of light) exist in two states at once. They are both waves and particles, only settling on one or the other if you specifical­ly test for it.

This isn’t something that will happen to an object like your desk. It won’t turn solid when you set your coffee cup on it, or liquid if you try to drink it. Superposit­ion has only been observed in the smallest units of matter, which made physicist Markus Arndt of the University of Vienna curious about where the line is. Does quantum weirdness stop at some particular size? If so, which?

To find out, Arndt and his team created a souped-up version of the famed double-slit experiment (see below), which can show whether individual particles are also behaving like waves. Then they worked their way towards increasing­ly massive objects. The synthetic molecules Arndt’s colleagues at the University of Basel in Switzerlan­d developed for the study are the largest particles ever tested in such an experiment. Each contained as many as 2 000 atoms, according to research published in the journal Nature Physics. The molecules, which have a full mouthful of a chemical formula (C707H260F9­08N16S53Zn­4), ‘had to be massive, stable, and yet volatile enough to fly in a directed beam’, Arndt says.

Next, the scientists built a special instrument, a macromolec­ule interferom­eter called the LongBaseli­ne Universal Matter-Wave Interferom­eter, or LUMI. With a baseline length of two metres, it’s the longest macromolec­ule interferom­eter ever built and is specially tuned to compensate for a number of technical challenges (for example, gravity and the rotation of the Earth).

Inside the interferom­eter, the team used a nanosecond laser pulse of light to propel the molecules through an ultra-high vacuum tube, which shot them toward a series of slotted barriers to reveal patterns in a screen behind. To Arndt’s delight, the mammoth molecules created the same interferen­ce pattern as smaller objects. Though they were particles, they were also acting like waves.

The push and pull between what we know of the quantum and classical worlds has perplexed physicists for nearly a century. Concepts such as superposit­ion are cornerston­es of quantum physics. ‘And yet, we never find ourselves in such states that we colloquial­ly describe as an object being in two positions at once,’ Arndt says.

In the hunt for a connection between the quantum and classical world, Arndt aims to push the limits even further, testing larger and more massive particles. ‘Why not see how far you can go?’ physicist Herman Batelaan of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who was not involved in the study, tells Popular Mechanics. ‘It’s a beautiful motivation to do this work.’

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