 Quantum foam, presented by Science at NASA. Quantum foam. It may sound like the name of a new craft beer, but it's something even more amazing. To see it, you have to dive down the rabbit hole of quantum mechanics, a branch of physics that describes how light and matter behave at atomic scales. In this bizarre realm, matter can be in two places at once. Electrons can behave as both particles and waves, and Schrodinger's cat can be alive and dead at the same time. Or so the quantum theorists tell us. There's is a world wildly different from Einstein's. In his highly successful theory of general relativity, Einstein tells us that energy equals mass, and mass warps spacetime. Remember the physics analogy of the trampoline with a bowling ball in the middle? Like that ball, which gently distorts the trampoline's canvas, the sun warps the smooth canvas of spacetime, enough to make planets move in curved orbits. A whole galaxy warps spacetime much more. The more massive the body, the more warping. But if we could zoom in on the quantum realm, we wouldn't see a smooth expansive canvas gently distorted by massive bodies. We'd see quantum foam. Quantum gravity models predict that spacetime is a seething foam of tiny regions where minuscule new dimensions unfurl and then furl back in on themselves, spontaneously appearing and disappearing with inconceivable quickness. These regions blink in and out of existence, like the bubbles in the foam of a freshly poured beer. There's no such thing as empty space. There is only quantum foam everywhere, such as spacetime for a quantum physicist. Eric Perlman of the Florida Institute of Technology says, the bubbles in the quantum foam are quadrillions of times smaller than atomic nuclei and last for infinitesimal fractions of a second, or in quantum speak, the size of a plonk length for a plonk time. According to string theorists, this requires an additional six dimensions. Spacetime itself is fluctuating in these regions. But this is all hearsay. We can't see this quantum foam in all its weird glory. Researchers have to look for evidence of its effect to prove it's there and determine its nature. Perlman and his colleagues recently attempted to do so by using X-ray and gamma ray observations of distant quasars by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope and the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System, or Veritas. Because these bubbles are so small and last for such a short time, they can never be observed directly, says Perlman. But they would affect light in an interesting way. Each photon's path would be slightly different as it maneuvered through the all-pervading myriads of tiny fluctuations frothing up spacetime. And as a result, the distance each photon travels would be different. Perlman says that over the cosmological distances that the photons travel from these distant sources, the effects of the fluctuations the photons encounter will accumulate. The more they accumulate, the more out of phase the light will get. Creating an image from a collection of such photons would be like trying to distinguish what one person is saying in a huge crowd of people talking. So it would be physically impossible to get a clear picture. But the findings of Perlman and his team took a bit of the fizz out of the quantum foam. It seems spacetime has to be smooth, at least at the level of a thousand times smaller than an atom, and spacetime must be much less foaming than most models predict. But, he cautions, this investigation does not go as far down as the Planck length, so there is still some hope for the tiniest of bubbles. For more news about quantum foam and other mind-bending NASA research, stay tuned to science.nasa.gov.