Skip to main content

247 zeptoseconds: Scientists set a new record for the fastest event measured

Even the most dedicated of timekeepers would struggle to record the event recently measured by researchers from Germany’s Goethe University Frankfurt. That’s putting it mildly. In fact, the event lasted just 247 zeptoseconds, a measure that, chances are, you’ve not encountered before. That’s because it’s so ridiculously rapid that it strains the definition of “event” in its brevity. One zeptosecond is a trillionth of a billionth of a second.

The event in question was the length of time that it takes for a photon to cross a hydrogen molecule. The significance of this is not that it takes so little time (at this unimaginably tiny scale, a single second may as well be a year), but rather that it is possible to record it.

“We used a so-called reaction microscope to determine the three-dimensional momentum of all fragments from the double ionization of the hydrogen molecule: Two protons and two electrons,” Sven Grundmann, one of the researchers on the project, told Digital Trends. “The molecules were prepared in a molecular beam that was crossed with light from the PETRA III synchrotron at DESY, Hamburg. With the momenta of all fragments available, we were able to transform the photoelectron momentum into the molecular frame of reference to unveil the interference pattern. The central interference maximum served the pointer of a clock on which we could measure the delay in electron emission between the two atoms of the hydrogen molecule.”

Reaction microscope
Sven Grundmann

Grundmann suggested that the previous fastest measured event was the “delay between photoelectron emission from the Neon 2s and 2p shell,” describing two different atomic orbitals, published in 2010. That comparatively languorous duration? A veritable dawdle of 21 attoseconds, approximately 100 times longer than it takes for the passage of light through a hydrogen molecule.

And does he think that this latest record will one day be smashed by a physics event the equivalent of a nanoscale Usain Bolt? “I am sure somebody will think of a clever way to measure something even shorter,” Grundmann said. “[However,] in the area of atomic and molecular physics, we may have reached an end. We have tracked how the fastest object passes the shortest distance. But I guess I will be surprised.”

A paper describing the work, titled “Zeptosecond Birth Time Delay in Molecular Photoionization,” was recently published in the journal Science.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
This new TeamGroup SSD is one of the fastest drives ever
The new TeamForce gaming SSD.

TeamGroup has just announced the release of a new PCIe Gen 5 SSD called the T-Force Cardea. Aimed at gamers, the SSD offers unprecedented read and write speeds. as well as huge storage capacity.

The company promises read speeds of over 13,000MB/s and write speeds above 12,000MB/s, which would easily put this SSD miles ahead of many other models available on the market.

Read more
SpaceX launches two missions in one day, setting new record
spaceX falcon 9

SpaceX has made two launches within one day using its Falcon 9 rockets, setting a new record for the shortest interval yet between launches. On Saturday, December 18, the company launched its Turksat 5B mission from Cape Canaveral, carrying a satellite into orbit late in the evening.

Turksat 5B Mission

Read more
NASA sets new launch date for Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft
Boeing Space's Starliner spacecraft.

NASA has announced it’s targeting May 2022 for the second orbital test flight of Boeing’s beleaguered Starliner CST-100 spacecraft, which could one day transport astronauts to and from the International Space Station (ISS).

The first uncrewed test flight (OFT-1) of Boeing's spacecraft took place in December 2019 and was supposed to see it dock with the ISS. But multiple issues with the spacecraft’s software shortly after launch resulted in the vehicle failing to reach the intended orbit to take it to the ISS, prompting NASA to cut short the mission.

Read more