蜜桃传媒破解版下载

Skip to main content

Researcher breaks light in half, cracking pillar of physics

Researcher breaks light in half, cracking pillar of physics

New physics research from 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 keeps the theory of light and matter fractious


Light can鈥檛 seem to keep itself together鈥攁t least in two dimensions鈥攁ccording to new findings from the University of Colorado Boulder.

This research found that when a dimension is removed from light鈥檚 space鈥攔educing it from three dimensions to two鈥攁nd the electron charge is turned way up, particles of light break down to half of their former selves.

These results, published , send cracks through a foundational pillar of modern physics鈥攖he theory of light and matter. It is also the first time that this type of behavior has been seen in a quantum field theory, outside of one that resulted in a Nobel Prize.

鈥淨uantum field theories are truly weird,鈥 remarked Paul Romatschke, an associate professor of physics at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 and the author of the article. 鈥淭hey behave in properties that we haven鈥檛 really thought about or imagined, expected, even though the theory itself is over 50 years old.鈥

Photograph of Paul Romatschke

Paul Romatschke, an associate professor of physics, managed to break a photon鈥攐r a particle听of light鈥攄own to half of itself.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 a theory that many people have studied their whole lives and yet there are new things that still appear that nobody really expected. It鈥檚 very much alive and unruly.鈥

Much like Romatschke鈥檚 other recent publication on string theory鈥檚 puzzle of three-quarters, this publication takes a well-known physics theory, quantum electrodynamics (the quantum field theory of how light and matter interact) and pushes it even further by attempting to solve a previously unsolvable question: What happens when an electron鈥檚 charge or its coupling (interaction) in light is sent incredibly high (or infinite)?

To do this, he looked to the same method used in his previous publication where he reduced the number of dimensions from three (the normal number) to two.

鈥淭his (new research) is not something like string theory that鈥檚 hard to observe in nature. It is our theory of light,鈥 said Romatschke. 鈥淭his is one of our most well-tested theories in three-dimensions.鈥

What he found is that when he reduces the dimensions, the photon, or particle of light, becomes very odd鈥攕o odd that it fractures to half of its former self.

This behavior is remarkable, according to Romatschke, for two reasons. First, the photon becomes a non-integer, and second, it is a simple fraction鈥攂oth of which shouldn鈥檛 be possible in quantum physics.

And yet, these findings are not alone. By simply being non-integers, they gain more than a superficial similarity to another Nobel-prize winning theory: The quantum Hall effect.

The quantum Hall effect says, through a method remarkably similar to what Romatschke used, that the electrical conductivity of different systems jumps in a way that is consistent with the change in electron charge. Basically, if the number of electron charges changes, so too does the conductivity.

The fractional quantum Hall effect, then, takes it one step further. It found that the jumps could match to a fraction of the charge, which is a theory that, at that time, had never been demonstrated before in quantum physics.

鈥淲e鈥檙e brought up in quantum mechanics to say this (non-integers) is forbidden,鈥 said Romatschke. 鈥淔or free particles, quantum mechanics says this cannot be true.鈥

And now it鈥檚 been seen again鈥攖his time with light.

鈥淚 think this (new research) tells us something very deep about what happens when quantum mechanics is pushed far鈥 far away from where we usually can solve things,鈥 said Romatschke. 鈥淚 think there are some deeper meanings behind this. It鈥檚 telling us something.鈥