Our Quantum Society: Living with Entanglement
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 17 Νοε 2016
Visit http://cqcs.berkeley.edu for future events and information on how you can participate.
This
panel was hosted by the Center for Quantum Coherent Science at UC
Berkeley on Monday, November 7, 2016 in the Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel
Engineering Center. Over 300 people attended.
Summary
Quantum
mechanics continues to stretch the limits of human thought by asserting
that two objects can be entangled such that a probe of one automatically
yields information about the other, even if they are at opposite ends
of the universe. Already observed in the spin properties of atoms and
the polarization of photons of light, generating entanglement in bulk at
the macroscopic scale may lead to unparalleled computing power and new
frontiers in metrology. At a yet larger cosmic scale, this same
entanglement which once troubled the architect of the theory of general
relativity, Einstein, is now postulated to be the thread that in many
cases stitches the fabric of the universe. In this forum, we will
explore the evolution of quantum entanglement, its role in cutting-edge
quantum technologies, and directions for future development.
Moderator
Irfan Siddiqi - Professor, Physics and Director, Center for Quantum Coherent Science, UC Berkeley, http://physics.berkeley.edu/people/fa...
Panelists
Cathryn Carson - Professor, History of Science, UC Berkeley, http://history.berkeley.edu/people/ca...
George Lakoff - Professor, Linguistics and Cognitive Science, UC Berkeley, https://georgelakoff.com
Leonard Susskind - Professor, Physics, Stanford University and Director of Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics, https://physics.stanford.edu/people/f...
Umesh Vazirani - Professor, EECS and Director, Berkeley Quantum Computation Center, UC Berkeley, https://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Facult...
Carl Williams - Deputy Director of the Physical Measurement Laboratory, NIST, https://www.nist.gov/people/carl-j-wi...
This
panel was hosted by the Center for Quantum Coherent Science at UC
Berkeley on Monday, November 7, 2016 in the Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel
Engineering Center. Over 300 people attended.
Summary
Quantum
mechanics continues to stretch the limits of human thought by asserting
that two objects can be entangled such that a probe of one automatically
yields information about the other, even if they are at opposite ends
of the universe. Already observed in the spin properties of atoms and
the polarization of photons of light, generating entanglement in bulk at
the macroscopic scale may lead to unparalleled computing power and new
frontiers in metrology. At a yet larger cosmic scale, this same
entanglement which once troubled the architect of the theory of general
relativity, Einstein, is now postulated to be the thread that in many
cases stitches the fabric of the universe. In this forum, we will
explore the evolution of quantum entanglement, its role in cutting-edge
quantum technologies, and directions for future development.
Moderator
Irfan Siddiqi - Professor, Physics and Director, Center for Quantum Coherent Science, UC Berkeley, http://physics.berkeley.edu/people/fa...
Panelists
Cathryn Carson - Professor, History of Science, UC Berkeley, http://history.berkeley.edu/people/ca...
George Lakoff - Professor, Linguistics and Cognitive Science, UC Berkeley, https://georgelakoff.com
Leonard Susskind - Professor, Physics, Stanford University and Director of Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics, https://physics.stanford.edu/people/f...
Umesh Vazirani - Professor, EECS and Director, Berkeley Quantum Computation Center, UC Berkeley, https://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Facult...
Carl Williams - Deputy Director of the Physical Measurement Laboratory, NIST, https://www.nist.gov/people/carl-j-wi...
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