Updated
Updated · New Scientist · Jun 11
Barontini Defines Time in 20,000-Atom Toy Universe, Suggesting It Emerges From Quantum Interactions
Updated
Updated · New Scientist · Jun 11

Barontini Defines Time in 20,000-Atom Toy Universe, Suggesting It Emerges From Quantum Interactions

1 articles · Updated · New Scientist · Jun 11

Summary

  • Using about 20,000 ultracold rubidium atoms, Giovanni Barontini built a two-sector “toy universe” and derived an internal clock after lasers drove quantum exchanges between its bright and dark parts.
  • Those exchanges increased entropy, letting Barontini define time from the system’s own evolution rather than imposing it externally; plugging that time into the Schrödinger equation reproduced the observed quantum states.
  • The result extends earlier work on time emerging from quantum correlations, including a 2013 light-particle experiment, and researchers said the cold-atom setup is a more complex test that had not previously made Schrödinger dynamics work this way.
  • Physicists said the experiment speaks to efforts to reconcile quantum theory with gravity, where some proposals remove time from the deepest level of reality, though critics cautioned that a lab-built model cannot prove how time works in the actual cosmos.
  • Barontini called the study an experimental check on long-standing ideas rather than proof that time is fundamentally illusory, and said he next wants to add black-hole-like trapping regions to the ultracold system.

Insights

Could scientists build a 'timeless bubble' by stopping the quantum interactions described in this experiment?
If time is a quantum illusion, does this mean the past and future exist simultaneously?

Experimental Proof That Time Emerges from Quantum Interactions: The 2026 Barontini "Mini-Universe" Breakthrough

Overview

In June 2026, Professor Giovanni Barontini and his team at the University of Birmingham made a groundbreaking discovery by showing that time can emerge from the internal interactions within a quantum system. Their experiment created a controlled 'mini-universe' where time, called entropic time, was not an external force but arose naturally from the system's own dynamics. This entropic time displayed all the features of ordinary time, such as a clear direction and consistent flow, challenging the traditional view that time is a fundamental, independent dimension. The findings offer new insight into the true nature of time and its origins.

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