Nobel, quantum mechanics and Prize Clarke
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First-ever real-time quantum uncertainty measured with ultrafast squeezed light
In a first-of-its-kind experiment, researchers have captured quantum uncertainty in real time using ultrafast pulses of light. Nearly a century after Werner Heisenberg proposed the uncertainty principle, this breakthrough puts the famous concept into direct, real-time observation.
Researchers from the University of Arizona, working with an international team, have captured and controlled quantum uncertainty in real time using ultrafast pulses of light. Their discovery, published in the journal Light: Science & Applications,
This article explores how our understanding of the universe has evolved—from the scale of everyday experience down to the Planck length
It was just past 2:00 am when a mysterious number rang Nobel laureate John Clarke, what he deemed "obviously a joke call" that grew increasingly surreal when he heard "a voice from Sweden."- 'Basic science' - Nobel laureate Mary Brunkow,
While error correction should become more effective as the number of physical qubits in a logical qubit increases, adding more physical qubits to a logical qubit also adds more noise. Much progress has been made in addressing this and other noise issues in recent years, however.
Clarke discussed the importance of federal funding – the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory paid for much of his research and equipment – at a time when the Trump Administration is making