
Quantum Computing and Quantum Topology
... If a physical system were to have quantum topological (necessarily nonlocal) degrees of freedom, which were insensitive to local probes, then information contained in them would be automatically protected against errors caused by local interactions with the ...
... If a physical system were to have quantum topological (necessarily nonlocal) degrees of freedom, which were insensitive to local probes, then information contained in them would be automatically protected against errors caused by local interactions with the ...
Quantum-to-classical transition for fluctuations in the early Universe
... can be traced back to unavoidable quantum fluctuations of some scalar field φ. These fluctuations then lead – together with analogous scalar fluctuations in the metric – to anisotropies in the cosmic background radiation. In addition, there are relict gravitational waves originating from tensor fluc ...
... can be traced back to unavoidable quantum fluctuations of some scalar field φ. These fluctuations then lead – together with analogous scalar fluctuations in the metric – to anisotropies in the cosmic background radiation. In addition, there are relict gravitational waves originating from tensor fluc ...
Quantum Mechanics Booklet
... to travel through. Sound waves can only travel through a medium, like air. For instance, a bell in a vacuum, where there is no air, will not make a sound. However, light can travel without a medium. We know this, as the light from the sun and other stars travels to us through empty space. Did this m ...
... to travel through. Sound waves can only travel through a medium, like air. For instance, a bell in a vacuum, where there is no air, will not make a sound. However, light can travel without a medium. We know this, as the light from the sun and other stars travels to us through empty space. Did this m ...
group5(AI_and_Mind)
... Penrose: Brain and Quantum Physics Not all human intelligence is algorithmic Physical laws are described by algorithm Not easy to come up with physical properties or processes that are not described by them How do then we explain the implied superiority of human brain? Quantum Physics! ...
... Penrose: Brain and Quantum Physics Not all human intelligence is algorithmic Physical laws are described by algorithm Not easy to come up with physical properties or processes that are not described by them How do then we explain the implied superiority of human brain? Quantum Physics! ...
A system`s wave function is uniquely determined by its
... the famous argument of Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen [2] (see also [3]) and, more recently, by information-theoretic considerations [4–6]. The opposite (objective) point of view was taken, for instance, by Schrödinger (at least initially), von Neumann, Dirac, and Popper [7–9]. To turn this debate in ...
... the famous argument of Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen [2] (see also [3]) and, more recently, by information-theoretic considerations [4–6]. The opposite (objective) point of view was taken, for instance, by Schrödinger (at least initially), von Neumann, Dirac, and Popper [7–9]. To turn this debate in ...