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Decoded: How the Smallest Particles 'Fall' in Love This Valentine's Day

by Dr. Trupti Shirole on February 14, 2016 at 3:12 AM

'Love makes the world go round', and it may, in a sense, help us learn about other worlds. Here is a love story at the smallest scale imaginable- particles of light.


It is possible to have particles that are so intimately linked that a change to one affects the other, even when they are separated at a distance. This idea, called 'entanglement', is part of the branch of physics called quantum mechanics, a description of the way the world works at the level of atoms and particles that are even smaller.

‘Quantum mechanics, a branch of physics used to study the 'love' between particles is also being used in research to improve communications between space and Earth.’

Now, the technology used to study the 'love' between particles is also being used in research to improve communications between space and Earth.

"What is exciting is that in some sense, we're doing experimental philosophy. Humans have always had certain expectations of how the world works, and when quantum mechanics came along, it seemed to behave differently," said Krister Shalm, physicist with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Boulder, Colorado.

In 1964, however, John Bell published the idea that any model of physical reality with such hidden variables also must allow for the instantaneous influence of one particle on another.

While Einstein proved that information cannot travel faster than the speed of light, particles can still affect each other when they are far apart according to Bell.

Scientists consider Bell's theorem an important foundation for modern physics.

"Our paper and the other two published last year show that Bell was right: any model of the world that contains hidden variables must also allow for entangled particles to influence one another at a distance," explained Francesco Marsili from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

The design of the new experiment can potentially be used in cryptography - making information and communications secure - as it involves generating random numbers.

Cryptography is not the only application of this research. Detectors similar to those used for the experiment could eventually also be used for deep-space optical communication.

Information can never travel faster than the speed of light - Albert Einstein was right about that.

Marsili said, "But through optical communications research, we can increase the amount of information we send back from space. The fact that the detectors from our experiment have this application creates great synergy between the two endeavors."

The paper is published in the Physical Review Letters.

Source: IANS

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