Physicists Create a Wormhole Using a Quantum Computer

1955

Member
While I despise Google’s data collection business what they use some of that revenue for is just outstanding. This YouTube “How Physicists Created a Wormhole in a Quantum Computer” base on the
QuantamagazinePhysicists Create a Holographic Wormhole Using a Quantum Computer” article is unprecedented in bridging the gap between general relativity & quantum mechanics. Both links are a bit lengthy & mainly for geeks, but the results are important to understanding how the universe works which in the long run benefits us all.

This research was led by “Maria Spiropulu” using a Google Quantum Computer called Sycamore housed at Google Quantum AI in Santa Barbara, California.

So kudos to Google and their investment in Quantum Computers…
 

Your gonna need some Gluon’s and Quarks...
 

I'm not even going to pretend to understand the physics. I have a mental image of a bunch of scientists crowded around a computer, trying to create a wormhole, when one says. "Scotty, we need more power". But whatever they did sounds cool, and adds to our understanding of the universe.
 
I've been watching quantum physics on U-tube and am fascinated!

Yeah, I Love it too because it allows possibilities that we haven’t even thought of yet. My pet belief is the universe is consciousness and everything that exists is the result of that. So I like to believe we are just one possible expressions of it neither alive or dead.
 
Ah. It appears, @1955, you have given much thought to this.
I think of consciousness as radiation from the center of pure Being.
All creation as being the field of consciousness in varied form and phenomena.
so, it appears in the most gross levels and the most subtle levels.
But, I think my philosophies come from the Upanishads, the ancient Vedic religion,
which I find in complete harmony with the ever-changing quantum physics.
All our different views and theories is what makes this so exciting!
Oh! I could bore you for hours and hours about this! haha!
 
I've been fascinated with Quantum Mechanics and the Theory of Relativity since the mid 70s, when I first subscribed to Scientific American.
Google's Sycamore Quantum computer mentioned in the article is orders of magnitudes faster than conventional supercomputers, but is still a prototype. When they achieve error correction then there will be true quantum computing. Current encryption methods will be obsolete, new encryption standards are currently being considered, to withstand quantum cracking.
 

Back
Top