A wave of groundbreaking discoveries in quantum physics is challenging some of the most deeply held assumptions about time, gravity, and the very fabric of reality. From reversed time arrows to universe-ending simulations, scientists are rapidly pushing quantum research into territory that was once purely theoretical.
Time Has a Flaw — and Physicists Just Found It
A new study published in Physical Review Research, led by PhD student Nicola Bortolotti at the Enrico Fermi Museum and Research Centre in Rome, has found that time itself may not be perfectly precise. Supported by the Foundational Questions Institute (FQxI), an international team examined quantum collapse models — theories in which the quantum wavefunction collapses spontaneously, without any need for an observer or measurement.
Their analysis of two leading collapse models — the Diósi-Penrose model and Continuous Spontaneous Localization — revealed a striking implication: if these models correctly describe reality, time would contain an inherent, irreducible uncertainty. This would set a hard limit on how precisely any clock could ever measure time.
“What we did was to take seriously the idea that collapse models may be linked to gravity. And then we asked a very concrete question: What does this imply for time itself?” said Bortolotti.
The researchers were quick to note that this uncertainty is far smaller than anything detectable today. “The uncertainty is many orders of magnitude below anything we can currently measure, so it has no practical consequences for everyday timekeeping,” said co-author Catalina Curceanu.
Time Moving Fast and Slow — Simultaneously
In a separate but connected development, a team led by Igor Pikovski, a theoretical physics professor at Stevens Institute of Technology, published research in Physical Review Letters showing that the flow of time itself might exist in a quantum superposition — ticking faster and slower at the same moment.
This concept, known as the “quantum twin paradox,” builds on Einstein’s classic time dilation idea. Just as twins age differently if one takes a high-speed journey, a single quantum clock could theoretically experience two different rates of time simultaneously — becoming, in a sense, both younger and older at once.
The team, working in collaboration with researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Colorado State University, argued that ultraprecise atomic clocks — the kind that trap single ions like aluminum or ytterbium and cool them to near absolute zero — combined with quantum computing techniques, could soon test this idea in a real laboratory setting.
“Time plays very different roles in quantum theory and in relativity,” said Pikovski. “What we show is that bringing these two concepts together can reveal hidden quantum signatures of time-flow that can no longer be described by classical physics.
Scientists Learn to Reverse the Arrow of Time
While one team probes the limits of time measurement, researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have gone a step further — engineering quantum systems that appear to run backward in time.
Published in Physical Review X, the study describes quantum control protocols that generate processes more consistent with time flowing backward than forward. The team, led by physicist Luis Pedro García-Pintos, designed a control system — called a Hamiltonian — that uses a sequence of fields and pulses to cancel, amplify, or overcompensate for quantum measurement disturbances. The result: quantum trajectories that appear stretched, blurred, or even inverted in time.
“Unlike phenomena we observe around us, at the microscopic level, the most fundamental laws of physics see forward and backward movement in time as physically possible,” said García-Pintos. “The tools we’ve constructed can manipulate the perceived arrow of time, leading to surprising, novel ways to control quantum systems.”
One immediate practical use is a measurement engine that extracts energy from quantum monitoring processes — effectively treating the act of measurement as a thermodynamic resource to power other quantum operations.
Quantum Gravity May Explain the Big Bang
Beyond the nature of time, physicists are also rethinking how the universe began. A research team led by Niayesh Afshordi of the University of Waterloo and the Perimeter Institute explored a framework called Quadratic Quantum Gravity, published in Physical Review Letters, which attempts to bridge the gap between Einstein’s general relativity and quantum mechanics.
Standard general relativity predicts a singularity at the moment of the Big Bang — a point where density, temperature, and curvature become mathematically infinite. This breakdown suggests the theory cannot fully describe the universe’s first moments. Afshordi’s team found that their quantum-consistent extension of gravity not only avoids this problem but also naturally produces a period of early cosmic inflation — without needing to bolt on extra theoretical components.
“It is striking that inflation may instead arise from gravity itself,” Afshordi said. Future confirmation could come from detecting primordial gravitational waves or subtle imprints in the cosmic microwave background (CMB).
Scientists Simulate an End-of-Universe Scenario
In one of the more dramatic recent experiments, physicists have simulated a quantum process that could theoretically end the universe. The concept, called false vacuum decay, suggests our universe may exist in an unstable energy state. Should a more stable “true vacuum” state exist, the transition between the two could produce an expanding bubble traveling at the speed of light, instantly erasing everything in its path.
Researchers used Rydberg atoms arranged in a ring-like configuration and excited by lasers to simulate the formation of false and true vacuum states. A separate team at the University of Leeds used a quantum annealer with more than 5,000 qubits to simulate bubble nucleation, growth, and interaction.
A Professor of Particle Physics at the University of Leeds put the stakes plainly: “The universe will fundamentally change its structure… collapse like a house of cards.” Scientists are careful to note, however, that such an event — if it were to occur — would most likely unfold over billions of years.
Entanglement of Moving Atoms Confirmed for the First Time
In a feat that took decades to achieve, physicists have observed quantum entanglement in two atoms while they were in motion — a first in quantum science. The experiment, involving helium atoms cooled to a Bose-Einstein condensate and split into colliding groups, produced pairs of atoms scattered in exactly opposite directions with correlated, entangled momenta.
“It’s really weird for us to think that this is how the Universe works,” said Dr. Sean Hodgman of the Australian National University, the study’s senior author. “You can read about it in a textbook, but it’s really weird to think that a particle can be in two places at once.” Published in Nature Communications, the result could help physicists probe the deeper relationship between quantum mechanics and gravity.
Taken together, these findings mark a pivotal moment in quantum science — a field that started as abstract theory and is rapidly becoming one of the most testable, consequential branches of modern physics.
