Updated
Updated · Popular Mechanics · May 6
Scientists find fundamental limit to time measurement in gravity-linked quantum collapse models
Updated
Updated · Popular Mechanics · May 6

Scientists find fundamental limit to time measurement in gravity-linked quantum collapse models

6 articles · Updated · Popular Mechanics · May 6
  • In Physical Review Research, Nicola Bortolotti and colleagues said gravitational fluctuations would create intrinsic uncertainty in time, though even atomic clocks measuring to 19 decimal places would not detect it.
  • The study examined objective-collapse theories including GRW, CSL and the Diósi-Penrose model, which proposes gravity helps trigger wave function collapse in quantum systems.
  • Researchers said the result offers a way to test radical quantum ideas against precision measurements, while leaving open whether gravity actually causes collapse and whether future ultra-precise squeezed-state clocks could probe the effect.
If gravity makes time 'fuzzy,' could we ever build a perfect clock to prove it?
Does a fundamental 'fuzziness' in time mean the future is even more uncertain than quantum mechanics implies?