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Stopping Time

What can you do in a billionth of a billionth of a second?

Using high-energy laser pulses, physicists have recently broken time down to attoseconds—fractions of a second so small the digits on a clock would seem to go on forever. We're used to seeing Olympic skiers win events by hundredths of a second. A skier who won by a single attosecond would be ahead by less than the width of an atom—less even than a proton. Insignificant as they sound, such time frames are opening new windows onto chemical reactions and other impossibly speedy events.

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Time just got shorter. Granted, it was pretty short already: Four years ago, physicists managed to create a pulse of laser light lasting only five femtoseconds, or five quadrillionths (5 x 10^-15) of a second. In everyday photography, a camera flashbulb can "stop time" at about 1/1,000 of a second—fast enough to freeze the swing of a baseball batter, if not a speeding fastball. Likewise, the femtosecond "flashbulb" enabled scientists to observe phenomena never before seen in freeze-frame: vibrating molecules, the binding of atoms during chemical reactions, and other ultrasmall, ultrafleeting events.

But ultrafast is not good enough. All kinds of important things can happen between one quadrillionth of a second and the next, and if your flashbulb is too slow, you'll miss out. So scientists have been pressing on, punching the clock, hurrying to create even tinier windows of time through which to study the physical world. Recently, an ...

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