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posted by mrpg on Saturday September 22 2018, @03:59PM   Printer-friendly
from the read-and-find-out dept.

How long does a quantum jump take?

It was one of the crucial experiments in quantum physics: when light falls on certain materials, electrons are released from the surface. Albert Einstein was the first to explain this phenomenon in 1905, when he spoke of "light quanta" -- the smallest units of light that we call photons today.

In tiny fractions of a second, an electron of the material absorbs a photon, "jumps" into another state and leaves the surface. This "photoelectric effect" is so fast that until now it has mostly been regarded as instantaneous -- as a sudden change of state, from one moment to the next. However, new measurement methods are so precise that it has now become possible to observe such a process and to measure its duration precisely. A team from the Vienna University of Technology, together with research groups from Garching, Munich and Berlin, determined the duration of the photoelectric effect at a tungsten surface. The results were published in the journal Nature.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 22 2018, @06:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 22 2018, @06:08PM (#738613)

    Makes sense to me. Sounds fascinating. I doubt it would lead to FTL travel or communication. Probably would be yet another discontinuity that occurs in the realm of the very small.

    Though who knows. Experiments that try to pinpoint the scale necessary for quantum phenomena to break down are interesting. Superconductors come to mind.