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Double-Slit Experiment in Time, Not Space

TheMatt writes "Thomas Young's double-slit experiment is a classic experiment that helped establish the wave-like nature of light. Since then, it has been done with atoms, buckyballs, and biomolecules. It has even been seen in a single molecule, and the single electron version was voted the most beautiful experiment by Physics World readers (covered previously on Slashdot). Now, PhysicsWeb is reporting that Gerhard Paulus and coworkers have conducted the double-slit experiment using a double-slit in time, not space. The "slit" was a crafted femtosecond pulse consisting of one-and-a-half cycles--say, two maxima and one minima--passed through an argon gas. Each maxima has a probability of ionizing an argon atom and producing an electron. The electrons were accelerated to a detector which observed an interference pattern since the detector had no idea which maximum produced the electron."

17 of 535 comments (clear)

  1. Great minds think alike. by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    Just today at lunch I was saying "Wouldn't it be cool to craft a femtosecond pulse consisting of 1.5 cycles, say 2 maxima and 1 minima, passed through argon gas? We could get electrons which could be accelerated then observe the resulting interference patterns!"

    Well, that didn't fly. The guys got pissed off and yelled "Shut up and watch the stripper!" so I sheepishly went back to my titties and beer.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Great minds think alike. by gardyloo · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hm... strip club....

      Gas? Check.
      Femtosecond pulses? Not that kind of club, but Check.
      Maxima with a minimum between them? Yup.

      Dude, it was all there. What else did you need?!?

    2. Re:Great minds think alike. by ShadyG · · Score: 4, Funny
      Just today at lunch I was saying "Wouldn't it be cool to craft a femtosecond pulse consisting of 1.5 cycles, say 2 maxima and 1 minima, passed through argon gas?"

      No, you have it wrong. See, It is possible to synthesize excited bromide in an argon matrix! Yes, it's an excimer, frozen in its excited state...As soon as we apply a field, we couple to a state that is radiatively coupled to the ground state.
    3. Re:Great minds think alike. by yeuph · · Score: 5, Funny

      The nobel prize winning physicist, Richard Feynman, was known to work out of a strip club. He'd scribble stacks of equations on their napkins will sitting in a corner looking at the girls. When the stripclub was tried for indecency, he was the club's star witness in proving that a valuable service was being conducted there!

    4. Re:Great minds think alike. by 808140 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Haha. :)

      Well, you know, there's an old saying: physicists grow up to be engineers, and mathematicians grow up to be accountants. I don't think it's true (nothing bores me more than number crunching, I'd never go into accounting) but you have to admit, neither of our fields are particularly applicable, at least in their purest forms.

      All my physics friends took jabs at engineers non-stop, too, back in school. Now they either work as engineers, or are paid much less. But then, look at Business majors. :)

      Not that I blame them for making fun of engineers or anything. Engineers are... well, engineers, which reminds me of an old joke, as I veer dangerously off-topic. A mathematician, a physicist, and an engineer are all asked to define Pi.

      The mathematician says, "Pi is equal to the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter."

      The physicist says, "Pi is equal to 3.141592653589, plus or minus 3 in the last digit."

      The engineer says, "It's about 3."

      Yuck yuck.

    5. Re:Great minds think alike. by mikeee · · Score: 4, Funny

      And the accountant closes the door and replies quietly, "What do you need it to be ?"

  2. Ah yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've been trying for years to do the double-slit experiment. Alas, the wife still won't go for it.

    1. Re:Ah yes... by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's a pity because your nanoscale penis is probably about the right size for quantum effects to be significant.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  3. The Double-Slit Experiment by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 5, Funny
    Thomas Young's double-slit experiment is a classic experiment that helped establish the wave-like nature of light. Since then, it has been done with atoms, buckyballs, and biomolecules.

    Not to mention flowers, too...

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  4. Re:Full Text by ac3boy · · Score: 5, Funny

    "In the classic version of the experiment, electrons pass through a mask containing two parallel slits and produce a pattern of bright and dark interference fringes on a screen." Wasn't this called Pong?

  5. Re:Question for /. subscribers by FrostedWheat · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't worry, the second time this story is posted you'll have figured it out.

    :-)

  6. Of course the most important question is.. by wcrowe · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...how can we turn this into some sort of weapon?

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
  7. Re:Great minds think alike. : Moving Dimensions by jafiwam · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just a randomly picked response to this thread.

    Here ya go:

    www.timecube.com

    There's gotta be a second or fourth corollary to Goodwin's Law here somewhere... mentioning the time cube guy....

  8. Re:Question for /. subscribers by donutello · · Score: 5, Funny

    Will the second story in time interfere with the first one?

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
  9. What this means by null+etc. · · Score: 4, Funny
    This has enormous ramifications for the lay person. Let me break it down.

    The "slit" was a crafted femtosecond pulse consisting of one-and-a-half cycles--say, two maxima and one minima--passed through an argon gas.

    Anyone who has a femtosecond pulse generator should feel comfortable with this. If not, get access to a two-photon UV femtosecond pulse generator which uses nanosecond-time-scale infrared laser to deplete the terminal state of an F2 laser, based on F2 transitions.

    Next, you'll want a healthy dose of argon gas. Argon is used to reduce heat loss in sealed units by slowing down convection inside the air space. You can get argon gas cartridges to prevent wine oxidation, which is a neat little side benefit. A 50L cylinder filled with argon gas to a pressure of 10130 kPa at 30C has approximately 201 moles of argon. Just remember that if you're going to lase with argon, its most efficient transitions are at 488 nm and 514.5 nm.

    So now you'll need to create an ion chamber using the argon gas. You'll need a metal conducting can, and a wire electrode in the center which is well insulated from the chamber walls. The chamber, of course, will be filled with argon.

    Next, you'll need to use your femtosecond pulse generator to apply a DC voltage between the outer can and center electrode. This will create an electric field, of only a few volts, that sweeps the ions to the oppositely charged electrodes. For some additional fun, if you apply a few hundred volts, the electron emissions will produce "secondary emissions", which amplify the results. I wouldn't recommend creating one of these by hand if you haven't already done so, but remember to use a 4.7uF capacitor with non-polar film, a 100,000 megohm resistor and a 2N4117A electrometer-grade JFET.

    Anyways, generating a local maxima shouldn't be too difficult if you keep the phase dynamics of your pulse generator within one half delta of the wavelength propogation delay of your argon gas cylinder. This, as always, varies according to room temperature, so be sure to calibrate your scales before attempting the experiment.

    The trickiest part of the experiment is to build a ray tube to display your intereference pattern. I suggest using a Tektronix Type 453 Oscilloscope, which may be hard to find but has the best bang per buck.

    In no time at all, you'll be generating double slits in time!

  10. Re:Time is an illusion? by BigZaphod · · Score: 4, Funny

    Lunch time, doubly so.

  11. Oblig. Feynman by Ironclad2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Physics is cool and all, if you're not quite bright enough to make it in Math" "Physics is to math as sex is to masturbation." -R. Feynman