Magnetic Field Creates Matter
Scientists have discovered a clever trick. A changing magnetic field can create entirely new forms of matter. These quantum states do not exist naturally. The research comes from Cal Poly. Physics lecturer Ian Powell led the study. Student Louis Buchalter also contributed. Their work appears in Physical Review B.
How the Trick Works
Normally, materials stay the same over time. However, this experiment varied magnetic fields carefully. As a result, exotic quantum behavior appeared. Powell explains that useful properties depend on timing. Therefore, you can engineer matter by driving it periodically. For example, the team created quantum phases with no static counterpart. That means these states only exist when the field switches. This finding opens new doors for physics.
This Matters for Technology
Quantum computers face a big problem: noise. Tiny errors disrupt their calculations. Nevertheless, this new method may produce more stable systems. The researchers uncovered hidden mathematical patterns. These patterns usually appear in higher-dimensional physics.
In addition, the work provides a precise map of topological phases. That map helps scientists understand stable quantum matter. Quantum bits, or qubits, are the foundation of future computing. Magnetic fields already control qubits. Therefore, this trick could improve quantum devices directly.
Student Buchalter says the project taught him persistence. “Research is rarely straightforward,” he notes. He plans to continue studying quantum matter. His goal is to help develop electronic and photonic devices. The team now seeks experimental validation. Once proven, the applications could reach pharmaceuticals, finance, and aerospace. This magnetic field trick might change how we build computers.

