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Physicists Observe Strange Quantum Rotation Effect That Defies Intuition

By Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendor, First Published,17th May,2026

Researchers discovered that atomic rotations inside a crystal can unexpectedly flip direction while still obeying the laws of angular momentum conservation.

An international team of researchers, including scientists from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) and the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, has directly observed for the first time how angular momentum moves and remains conserved inside a crystal lattice.

By using powerful terahertz laser pulses, the team was able to precisely manipulate these motions and discovered an unexpected effect: during the transfer process, the direction of rotation flips because of the material’s rotational symmetry.

The study, published in Nature Physics, offers new insight into the origins of magnetism and could help researchers develop more precise ways to control quantum materials.

Understanding Angular Momentum in Solids

Quantities such as energy, momentum, and angular momentum are governed by conservation laws, meaning they cannot be created or destroyed in a closed system.

Instead, they can only be transferred or converted into other forms. Although angular momentum is commonly associated with spinning objects like bicycles or carousels, it is also fundamental to quantum physics and plays a key role in magnetism.

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