'Spooky' quantum movements seen happening to large objects, scientists say

'What’s special about this experiment is we’ve seen quantum effects on something as large as a human."

Scientists have seen "spooky" quantum behaviour happening to objects at the human scale, according to a new paper.

Researchers have seen quantum fluctuations "kick" large objects such as mirrors, moving them by a tiny degree but one big enough to measure.

Such behaviour has previously been predicted by quantum physicists. But it has never before been measured.

The movements are the result of the way the universe is structured, when seen at the level of quantum mechanics: researchers describe it as a "noisy" space, where particles are constantly switching in and out of existence, which creates a low-level fuzz at all times.

Normally, that background of quantum "noise" is too subtle to detect in objects that are visible at the human-scale. But the new research shows that scientists have finally detected those movements, using new technology to watch for those fluctuations.

Researchers at the MIT LIGO Laboratory saw that the those fluctuations could move an object as big as a 40-kilogram mirror. The movement pushed the large mirrors a tiny amount, as predicted theoretically, allowing it to be measured by scientists.

The researchers were able to use special equipment called a quantum squeezer that allowed them to "manipulate" the noise so that it could be better observed.

"What's special about this experiment is we've seen quantum effects on something as large as a human," said Nergis Mavalvala, the Marble Professor and associate head of the physics department at MIT, in a statement.

"We too, every nanosecond of our existence, are being kicked around, buffeted by these quantum fluctuations. It's just that the jitter of our existence, our thermal energy, is too large for these quantum vacuum fluctuations to affect our motion measurably. With LIGO's mirrors, we've done all this work to isolate them from thermally driven motion and other forces, so that they are now still enough to be kicked around by quantum fluctuations and this spooky popcorn of the universe."

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By Andrew Griffin / The Independent Reporter

Technology editor and science reporter @independent.

Andrew Griffin is technology editor and science reporter at The Independent, and established and runs the InFact section. He primarily writes about the latest developments in science and technology – everything from rocket launches to phone launches, new games to gravitational waves – and the ways they impact on the rest of the world.

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(Source: independent.co.uk; July 1, 2020; https://tinyurl.com/ycvgq3lj)
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