← Back to Science Scientists working with styrofoam material to create time crystal in laboratory setting
🔬 Science: Quantum Physics

Revolutionary Discovery: How Scientists Created a Time Crystal Using Common Styrofoam

📅 9 February 2026 ⏱️ 4 min read
Scientists created a time crystal using an unexpected material: styrofoam (expanded polystyrene). This new state of matter, proposed by Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek in 2012, breaks the symmetry of time — something physicists considered impossible for decades.
40′ Record duration (minutes) — Dortmund 2024
2012 Wilczek's proposal for time crystals
2017 First experimental demonstration (Nature)
0 J Energy required to oscillate

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🔮 What Is a Time Crystal?

We are familiar with ordinary crystals: salt, diamonds, ice. These materials have atoms that repeat in regular patterns in space. A time crystal does something analogous but in time: its atoms oscillate periodically, without consuming energy.

The Basic Idea

An ordinary crystal breaks spatial translational symmetry: it doesn't look the same if you shift it by an arbitrary distance. A time crystal breaks temporal translational symmetry: it oscillates with a period different from the external drive. This means it is a new phase of matter.

⌛ From Theory to the Laboratory

The history of time crystals is full of twists:

2012: The Wilczek Proposal

Nobel laureate physicist Frank Wilczek proposed that systems could exist that oscillate in their ground state (lowest energy state). The proposal sparked intense debate and initial skepticism.

2015: The Objection

Watanabe and Oshikawa proved that Wilczek's original definition (an equilibrium time crystal) is impossible. But the idea didn't die — it simply evolved.

2017: The Confirmation

Two teams — Chris Monroe's (Maryland) using ytterbium ions and Mikhail Lukin's (Harvard) using diamond defects — simultaneously published in Nature the first experimental demonstration of a discrete time crystal.

2022: Google Quantum

Google's team created a time crystal on the Sycamore quantum computer. They proved that a time crystal can serve as protection for quantum information.

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🧱 The Breakthrough: A Time Crystal from Styrofoam

In February 2024, researchers at the University of Dortmund achieved something nobody expected: they created a time crystal from expanded polystyrene (EPS — styrofoam) that lasted for 40 full minutes — the longest duration ever recorded.

Unlike previous time crystals that required quantum computers, frozen ions, or diamond defects, this experiment used a simple, cheap, everyday material. The researchers used acoustic waves to excite the styrofoam beads, which began oscillating at a period twice that of the drive.

Ordinary Crystal vs Time Crystal

Repeating pattern In space / In time
Symmetry breaking Spatial / Temporal
Equilibrium state Equilibrium / Non-equilibrium
Energy for motion Yes / No (in ground state)
Example Salt, ice / Styrofoam, qubits

"A time crystal is like an eternal clock that ticks without needing a battery — not because it produces energy (it doesn't), but because motion is its most stable state."

— Frank Wilczek, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2004, MIT

🚀 Applications and the Future

Time crystals are not just an academic curiosity — they have practical applications:

Quantum Memory

The periodic oscillation protects quantum information from “decoherence.” This could solve one of the biggest problems in quantum computing.

Ultra-Precise Clocks

Time crystals could be used as the basis for precision clocks surpassing today's atomic clocks.

Sensors

Their stable periodicity could detect tiny disturbances in gravitational waves or magnetic fields — new tools for fundamental physics.

New Physics

Time crystals open new chapters in understanding “non-equilibrium” in nature — states of matter we never imagined.

Important Clarification

Time crystals are not perpetual motion machines. They do not produce energy and do not violate the laws of thermodynamics. Their oscillation occurs in the ground state (lowest energy), so no energy can be extracted from it.

time crystal quantum physics styrofoam Frank Wilczek quantum computing phases of matter scientific breakthrough Nobel Prize

📚 Sources & References