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DCPS students receive online instruction from teacher in Greece – The Owensboro Times

Teachers, students and parents across Daviess County have become well-acquainted with the term distance learning over the last several months, but that phrase holds a unique and quite literal meaning for Daviess County Public Schools Virtual Academy.

Susan Lazarou, who currently resides in Nikisiani, Greece, has served DCPS 7th- and 8th-grade students as an online English teacher since the start of the 2020 school year. In her mind, the distance from her students hasnt been problematic at all. In fact, she said she was drawn to the idea of distance learning.

I love teaching virtually, and the student feedback about virtual learning has been very positive, she said. Students quickly acclimated to the pacing of an online classroom and weve already had deep, rich discussions in each of my classes.

Lazarou got her start at DCPS in 2010 after being hired on to Daviess County High Schools English faculty. After that, she served as a college and career readiness counselor for DCPS along with Jeremy Camron for four years. She returned to the classroom for a year before leaving DCPS in 2018 to move to Europe and get married.

While she didnt exactly return to the classroom this year, Lazarou has set up camp in a spare room turned classroom in Greece. Having previously worked at DCHS with Assistant Principal Chad Alward who oversees DCPSs Virtual Academy Lazarou said she knew the online learning experience would be a positive one for everyone.

Despite an eight-hour time difference between Greece and Daviess County, Lazarou has managed to stay connected, innovative and explorative in using the opportunity and geography as a learning experience.

Because my school day begins at 4 p.m., I occasionally share a village view with my morning classes, though by Owensboros afternoon, its already dark here in Greece, she said. All my classes have been curious about Greek culture and I enjoy sharing my experiences with them. But the cultural exchange goes both ways my students help me stay connected to Daviess County.

Though Lazarous stay in Greece will be short-lived as she soon makes another move to Kublis, Switzerland, one of the biggest takeaways her travels have provided has come from learning, understanding and appreciating the deep, personal connection between her life in America and her life overseas.

This small American city and lovely Greek village are now connected in a small way. I find it interesting because in many ways, the people in both places are alike very generous, loving and caring, she said. One of the things that I hope my students will deeply understand is that, although customs and cultures vary, we are far more alike than we are different.

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New quantum paradox throws the foundations of observed reality into question – Space.com

If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound? Perhaps not, some say.And if someone is there to hear it? If you think that means it obviously did make a sound, you might need to revise that opinion.We have found a new paradox in quantum mechanics one of our two most fundamental scientific theories, together with Einstein's theory of relativity that throws doubt on some common-sense ideas about physical reality.

Take a look at these three statements:

These are all intuitive ideas, and widely believed even by physicists. But our research, published in Nature Physics, shows they cannot all be true or quantum mechanics itself must break down at some level.

This is the strongest result yet in a long series of discoveries in quantum mechanics that have upended our ideas about reality. To understand why it's so important, let's look at this history.

Quantum mechanics works extremely well to describe the behavior of tiny objects, such as atoms or particles of light (photons). But that behavior is very odd.

In many cases, quantum theory doesn't give definite answers to questions such as "where is this particle right now?" Instead, it only provides probabilities for where the particle might be found when it is observed.

For Niels Bohr, one of the founders of the theory a century ago, that's not because we lack information, but because physical properties like "position" don't actually exist until they are measured.

And what's more, because some properties of a particle can't be perfectly observed simultaneously such as position and velocity they can't be real simultaneously.

No less a figure than Albert Einstein found this idea untenable. In a 1935 article with fellow theorists Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, he argued there must be more to reality than what quantum mechanics could describe.

Read more: Einstein vs quantum mechanics ... and why he'd be a convert today

The article considered a pair of distant particles in a special state now known as an "entangled" state. When the same property (say, position or velocity) is measured on both entangled particles, the result will be random but there will be a correlation between the results from each particle.

For example, an observer measuring the position of the first particle could perfectly predict the result of measuring the position of the distant one, without even touching it. Or the observer could choose to predict the velocity instead. This had a natural explanation, they argued, if both properties existed before being measured, contrary to Bohr's interpretation.

However, in 1964 Northern Irish physicist John Bell found Einstein's argument broke down if you carried out a more complicated combination of different measurements on the two particles.

Bell showed that if the two observers randomly and independently choose between measuring one or another property of their particles, like position or velocity, the average results cannot be explained in any theory where both position and velocity were pre-existing local properties.

That sounds incredible, but experiments have now conclusively demonstrated Bell's correlations do occur. For many physicists, this is evidence that Bohr was right: physical properties don't exist until they are measured.

But that raises the crucial question: what is so special about a "measurement"?

In 1961, the Hungarian-American theoretical physicist Eugene Wigner devised a thought experiment to show what's so tricky about the idea of measurement.

He considered a situation in which his friend goes into a tightly sealed lab and performs a measurement on a quantum particle its position, say.

However, Wigner noticed that if he applied the equations of quantum mechanics to describe this situation from the outside, the result was quite different. Instead of the friend's measurement making the particle's position real, from Wigner's perspective the friend becomes entangled with the particle and infected with the uncertainty that surrounds it.

This is similar to Schrdinger's famous cat, a thought experiment in which the fate of a cat in a box becomes entangled with a random quantum event.

Read more: Schrdinger's cat gets a reality check

For Wigner, this was an absurd conclusion. Instead, he believed that once the consciousness of an observer becomes involved, the entanglement would "collapse" to make the friend's observation definite.

But what if Wigner was wrong?

In our research, we built on an extended version of the Wigner's friend paradox, first proposed by aslav Brukner of the University of Vienna. In this scenario, there are two physicists call them Alice and Bob each with their own friends (Charlie and Debbie) in two distant labs.

There's another twist: Charlie and Debbie are now measuring a pair of entangled particles, like in the Bell experiments.

As in Wigner's argument, the equations of quantum mechanics tell us Charlie and Debbie should become entangled with their observed particles. But because those particles were already entangled with each other, Charlie and Debbie themselves should become entangled in theory.

But what does that imply experimentally?

Read more: Quantum physics: our study suggests objective reality doesn't exist

Our experiment goes like this: the friends enter their labs and measure their particles. Some time later, Alice and Bob each flip a coin. If it's heads, they open the door and ask their friend what they saw. If it's tails, they perform a different measurement.

This different measurement always gives a positive outcome for Alice if Charlie is entangled with his observed particle in the way calculated by Wigner. Likewise for Bob and Debbie.

In any realisation of this measurement, however, any record of their friend's observation inside the lab is blocked from reaching the external world. Charlie or Debbie will not remember having seen anything inside the lab, as if waking up from total anaesthesia.

But did it really happen, even if they don't remember it?

If the three intuitive ideas at the beginning of this article are correct, each friend saw a real and unique outcome for their measurement inside the lab, independent of whether or not Alice or Bob later decided to open their door. Also, what Alice and Charlie see should not depend on how Bob's distant coin lands, and vice versa.

We showed that if this were the case, there would be limits to the correlations Alice and Bob could expect to see between their results. We also showed that quantum mechanics predicts Alice and Bob will see correlations that go beyond those limits.

Next, we did an experiment to confirm the quantum mechanical predictions using pairs of entangled photons. The role of each friend's measurement was played by one of two paths each photon may take in the setup, depending on a property of the photon called "polarisation". That is, the path "measures" the polarisation.

Our experiment is only really a proof of principle, since the "friends" are very small and simple. But it opens the question whether the same results would hold with more complex observers.

We may never be able to do this experiment with real humans. But we argue that it may one day be possible to create a conclusive demonstration if the "friend" is a human-level artificial intelligence running in a massive quantum computer.

Although a conclusive test may be decades away, if the quantum mechanical predictions continue to hold, this has strong implications for our understanding of reality even more so than the Bell correlations. For one, the correlations we discovered cannot be explained just by saying that physical properties don't exist until they are measured.

Now the absolute reality of measurement outcomes themselves is called into question.

Our results force physicists to deal with the measurement problem head on: either our experiment doesn't scale up, and quantum mechanics gives way to a so-called "objective collapse theory", or one of our three common-sense assumptions must be rejected.

Read more: The universe really is weird: a landmark quantum experiment has finally proved it so

There are theories, like de Broglie-Bohm, that postulate "action at a distance", in which actions can have instantaneous effects elsewhere in the universe. However, this is in direct conflict with Einstein's theory of relativity.

Some search for a theory that rejects freedom of choice, but they either require backwards causality, or a seemingly conspiratorial form of fatalism called "superdeterminism".

Another way to resolve the conflict could be to make Einstein's theory even more relative. For Einstein, different observers could disagree about when or where something happens but what happens was an absolute fact.

However, in some interpretations, such as relational quantum mechanics, QBism, or the many-worlds interpretation, events themselves may occur only relative to one or more observers. A fallen tree observed by one may not be a fact for everyone else.

All of this does not imply that you can choose your own reality. Firstly, you can choose what questions you ask, but the answers are given by the world. And even in a relational world, when two observers communicate, their realities are entangled. In this way a shared reality can emerge.

Which means that if we both witness the same tree falling and you say you can't hear it, you might just need a hearing aid.

This article was originally published atThe Conversation.The publication contributed the article to Live Science'sExpert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

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Breakthrough Prize Awarded to University of Texas at Austin Researcher – UT News – UT News | The University of Texas at Austin

AUSTIN, Texas An elite prize among scientists worldwide is being given to Steven Weinberg, a professor of physics at The University of Texas at Austin, for his continuous leadership in fundamental physics, with broad impact across particle physics, gravity and cosmology, and for communicating science to a wider audience.

Weinberg, a Nobel Prize winner and the Jack S. Josey Welch Foundation Chair in Science at UT Austin, will receive the 2020 Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. The award has been given only six times since 2012 and includes a $3 million prize for Weinberg.

Steven Weinberg is a legend in his field, and his research has deepened our understanding of the universe in profound and seminal ways, said UT Austin interim President Jay Hartzell. He is now our universitys firstBreakthrough Laureate,which is fitting for apersonwhose career has been defined by so many breakthroughs, both in his scientific research and as a teacher who has inspired generations of UT Austin students.

Weinberg is the recipient of numerous scientific awards and is best known for showing that two fundamental forces in the universe that dont appear to have much in commonelectromagnetism and the weak nuclear forceare actually different manifestations of a unified electroweak force. The weak nuclear force, which plays a role in the fusion reaction that fuels the sun, can be described mathematically in the same way as electromagnetism, the force that holds a magnet to your fridge, holds atoms together in solids and liquids, and produces light.

By uniting what had previously felt like two completely different ideas in physics, Steven Weinberg created one of the most beautiful theories in all of science, said Paul Goldbart, dean of the College of Natural Sciences. As he continues to make advances toward explaining mysteries about the workings of the universe, he is a worthy selection for this prize. Through his research, as well as his exemplary mentoring, teaching and writing for public audiences, he has been one of sciences best ambassadors to the world.

The electroweak theory became the first pillar of the Standard Model of Particle Physics, a compact yet precise way of describing the properties of all the known fundamental particles and forces (apart from gravity) that make up the universe. What the Standard Model is to physicists goes beyond even what the periodic table is to chemists or what a color wheel is to painters. It provides order to a complex world, the distilled essence of reality, a tool for exploration and discovery.

At first, Weinbergs electroweak theory, described in a three-page 1967 paper titled A Model of Leptons, didnt get much traction. But it predicted properties of several then-unobserved elementary particles, the W, Z and Higgs bosons, and predicted the existence of neutral weak currents as a means by which certain elementary particles interact. All of these predictions were later confirmed experimentally.

By 1976, his paper had become the worlds most cited high-energy physics paper, a position it held for more than three decades. Weinbergs electroweak theory, independently developed by Abdus Salam and which incorporated key insights from Sheldon Lee Glashow, garnered the three scientists the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics.

In the decades since, Weinberg has continued his research in quantum field theory, elementary particle physics and cosmology. Among other efforts, he has searched for a final theory of physics that would elegantly explain all the known forces and particles in the universe, including gravity. Hes also recently been searching for a fresh approach to quantum mechanicsa weirdly counterintuitive set of tools for describing the way subatomic particles behave that feels more like an Alice in Wonderland dream than realitythat makes more sense.

Weinberg is the first winner of a Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics on the UT Austin faculty. UT Austin alumnus Jim Allison, now at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, won the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences in 2014. A ceremony to celebrate all the 2020 Breakthrough Prize winners has been scheduled for March 2021.

Weinberg has written hundreds of scientific articles, including some of the most highly cited articles of all time, with papers on general relativity, quantum field theory, cosmology and quantum mechanics, as well as numerous popular books including To Explain the World and The First Three Minutes.

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Unlocking the mysteries of superconductivity | Stanford News – Stanford University News

Zhi-Xun Shen vividly remembers his middle school physics teacher demonstrating the power of X-rays by removing a chunk of radioactive material from a jar stored in a cabinet, dropping it into a bucket and having students put their hands between the bucket and a phosphor screen to reveal the bones hidden beneath the skin and flesh.

Zhi-Xun Shen (Image credit: Courtesy of SLAC)

That left an impression, Shen recalled with a grin. Sometimes he wonders if that moment set the stage for everything that followed.

Shen did not, he admits, have a strong interest in physics. There wasnt much incentive to study in mid-1970s China. The country was in the grip of the Cultural Revolution of 1966, which had shut down all the universities and left most of the nation, including the town south of Shanghai where his parents worked in medicine, in poverty. But as Shen and his mother watched his brother board a bus to the countryside for reeducation at a forced labor camp one cold morning, she turned to him and said, You are our hope for a college education.

Still, given the familys circumstances, college seemed like an impossible dream. Then an unlikely series of events changed everything.

In 1977, the Cultural Revolution ended and universities re-opened.

When the same inspiring middle school teacher organized a physics competition, then-16-year-old Shen entered and came in first at every level school, district, city and province. It was fascinating and built his self-confidence, cementing his feeling that physics was the field for him, but where could it possibly lead?

Shen won a college spot before graduating high school but held back a year on the advice of his father, then entered the physics program at Fudan University in Shanghai.

And in his third year as a physics major, he took an entrance exam for a program just launched by Chinese-American Nobel laureate Tsung-Dao Lee that brought a limited number of Chinese students to the U.S. for advanced studies in physics.

Thats how, in March 1987, Shen found himself in a jam-packed, all-night conference session that came to be known as the Woodstock of Physics, where nearly 2,000 scientists shared the latest developments related to the discovery of a new class of quantum materials known as high-temperature superconductors. These exotic materials conduct electricity with zero loss at much higher temperatures than anyone had thought possible, and expel magnetic fields so forcefully that they can levitate a magnet. Their discovery had revolutionary implications for society, promising better magnetic imaging machines for medicine, perfectly efficient electrical transmission for power lines, maglev trains and things we havent dreamed up yet.

I was able to get there early and get a seat in the room where the talks were going on, Shen recalled. To me, it was the most exciting thing a completely new frontier of science suddenly opened up.

In another extraordinary stroke of luck, he happened to be in a perfect position to jump into this new frontier, not just to probe the quantum states of matter that underlie superconductivity but to develop ever-sharper tools for doing so.

As a PhD student at Stanford University, hed been using extremely bright X-ray beams to investigate related materials at what is now SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, just up the hill from the main campus. As soon as the meeting ended, he set about applying the technique hed been using, called angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, or ARPES, to the new superconductors.

More than three decades later, with many important discoveries to his credit but the full puzzle of how these materials work still unsolved, Shen is the Paul Pigott Professor of Physical Sciences at Stanfords School of Humanities and Sciences and a professor of photon science at SLAC. He and his colleagues are putting the finishing touches on what may be the worlds most advanced system for probing unconventional superconductors and other exotic forms of matter to see what makes them tick.

Key parts of the system are just a few steps away from the X-ray beamline at SLACs Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL) where Shen carried out those first experiments. One of them is a recently upgraded setup where scientists can precision-build samples of superconducting material one atomic layer at a time, shuttle them through a tube and a vacuum chamber into the SSRL beamline without exposing them to air and make measurements with many times higher resolution than was ever possible before. The materials they build are also transported to the worlds first X-ray free-electron laser, SLACs Linac Coherent Light Source, for precision measurements not possible by other means.

These experimental setups were designed with a singular purpose in mind: to unravel the weirdly collaborative behavior of electrons, which Shen and others believe is the key to unlocking the secrets of superconductivity and other phenomena in a broad range of quantum materials.

Shens quest for answers to this riddle is driven by his curiosity about how this remarkable phenomenon that shouldnt have happened, happened, he said. You could argue that its a macroscopic quantum phenomenon nature desperately trying to reveal itself. It only happens because those electrons work together in a certain way.

The first superconductors, discovered in 1911, were metals that became perfectly conducting when chilled below 30 kelvins, or minus 406 degrees Fahrenheit. It took about 50 years for theorists to explain how this worked: Electrons interacted with vibrations in the materials atomic lattice in a way that overcame the natural repulsion between their negative charges and allowed them to pair up and travel effortlessly, with zero resistance. Whats more, these electron pairs overlapped and formed a condensate, an altogether different state of matter, whose collective behavior could only be explained by the nonintuitive rules of quantum mechanics.

Scientists thought, for various reasons, that this could not occur at higher temperatures. So the discovery in 1986 of materials that superconduct at temperatures up to minus 225 degrees Fahrenheit was a shock. Weirder still, the starting materials for this form of superconductivity were insulators, whose very nature would be expected to thwart electron travel.

In a perfect metal, Shen explained, each of the individual electrons is perfect in the sense that it can flow freely, creating an electrical current. But these perfect metals with perfect individual electrons arent superconducting.

In contrast, the electrons in materials that give rise to superconductivity are imperfect, in the sense that theyre not free to flow at all. But once they decide to cooperate and condense into a superconducting state, not only do they lose that resistance, but they can also expel magnetic fields and levitate magnets.

So in that sense, superconductivity is far superior, Shen said. The behavior of the system transcends that of the individuals, and that fascinates me. You and I are made of hydrogen, carbon and oxygen, but the fact that we can have this conversation is not a property of those individual elements.

Although many theories have been floated, scientists still dont know what prompts electrons to pair up at such high temperatures in these materials. The pursuit has been a long road its been 33 years since that crazy Woodstock night but Shen doesnt mind. He tells his students that a grand scientific challenge is like a puzzle you solve one piece a time. Better tools are gradually bringing the full picture into focus, he says, and we have already come a long way.

Stanford Report is exploring the stories behind the curiosity and excitement that drives foundational discoveries in the arts, humanities, social sciences and sciences.

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When We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamn Labatut review the dark side of science – The Guardian

God does not play dice with the world, Albert Einstein famously declared, to which Benjamn Labatut would surely retort: perhaps not but the devil does. In fact, Einstein himself had a lifelong niggle of doubt about mathematics, the discipline that we suppose keeps the Lord away from the gaming tables. How is it, he wondered, that an intellectual tool invented by humans can comprehend, account for and even manipulate so much of objective reality? That the physical world should be amenable to something we made up seemed to him suspect.

Is it perhaps that we register only as much of the world as our figurings can encompass? Wittgenstein had already conjectured that the limits of our language are the limits of our knowledge; could this be the case also, but more radically, with mathematics and the branches of science on which it is based? We see only that which we are capable of seeing: how much is beyond us?

About quantum mechanics, the development of which was as bold and momentous a feat as the formulation of the theory of general relativity, Einstein had more than a doubt he loathed it, refusing to accept a version of physics that replaced Newtonian certitude with a haze of probabilities. He spent the last 30 years of his life attempting to bring about a synthesis that would transcend quantum theory, and failed. Outlandish hypotheses put forward in the late 1920s by Werner Heisenberg and Niels Bohr, the originators of the Copenhagen Interpretation of how atoms work, today underpin the science that guides the exploration of the farthest reaches of space and the workings of the mobile phone in your pocket.

Books of popular science usually celebrate the wondrous achievements that applied mathematics has wrought in the realms of physics, chemistry and cosmology. Labatut, born in Holland and resident in Chile, will have none of it. When We Cease to Understand the World (translated by Adrian Nathan West) is his ingenious, intricate and deeply disturbing work of fiction based on real events, though it might have been better to call it a nonfiction novel, since the majority of the characters are historical figures, and much of the narrative is based on historical fact.

Towards the close of the book we are introduced briefly to the narrators neighbour, whom he encounters on his nocturnal strolls with his dog and whom he refers to as the night gardener, because he tends his plants when theyre asleep and wont be distressed by his interfering with them. It is to this mysterious figure that the narrator or Labatut, since the two seem synonymous gives the last, alarming, word. For the gardener, sums are the root of all contemporary evil: It was mathematics not nuclear weapons, computers, biological warfare or our climate Armageddon which was changing our world to the point where, in a couple of decades at most, we would simply not be able to grasp what being human really meant.

The first section of Labatuts book moves at a dizzying pace. He begins with a guided tour of a chamber of horrors in which we encounter some of the more diabolical inventions prompted by two world wars, and are introduced to a blur of real-life characters including the drug-raddled Hermann Gring, who crushed a cyanide capsule in his mouth to avoid the hangmans rope; the father of computing, Alan Turing, who is reputed to have killed himself by biting into an apple he had injected with the same poison; Johann Jacob Diesbach, the inventor of Prussian blue, the first modern synthetic pigment and the basis of cyanide; and the alchemist Johann Dippel, who may have been the model for Mary Shelleys Frankenstein.

The real villain here, however, is the chemist Fritz Haber (who died in 1934), who directed the programme of poison gas attacks that killed tens of thousands of soldiers in the first world war, an accomplishment that drove his disapproving wife to suicide. Haber also discovered how to harvest nitrogen and make the fertiliser that saved the hundreds of millions of people who would have died in worldwide famines at the beginning of the 20th century. All the same, in the end he was overwhelmed by guilt, not, Labatut writes, for the part he had played in the death of untold human beings yes, the generally fine translation does wobble in places but because his method of extracting nitrogen from the air had so altered the natural equilibrium of the planet that he feared the worlds future belonged not to mankind but to plants.

After this hair-raising opening we are launched into somewhat more tranquil regions of spacetime, where float more familiar characters such as Einstein and other 20th-century physicists and mathematicians, and the narrative pace slows as the booster rocket that was the first chapter falls away.

One of the most impressive aspects of the book is the wonderfully intricate web of associations that it weaves. The mathematician and soldier Karl Schwarzschild solved the field equations in the theory of general relativity in 1915, the same year Einstein published them. Einstein was astounded to receive his letter containing the solution, and soon replied to it; however, Schwarzschild was already dead, of an obscure disease which was possibly the result of his having been caught in a gas attack in the trenches

One of the consequences of his solution was the Schwarzschild singularity, an early name for the phenomenon we now know as a black hole. From the abyss of war he had written to a friend: We have reached the highest point of civilisation. All that is left for us is to decay and fall.

Next we meet, or are confronted with, two of the greatest mathematicians and strangest human beings of our time. The Japanese Shinichi Mochizuki invented a new kind of mathematics; a fellow theorist said of one of his papers that he felt that it had come from the future. Mochizuki achieved fame in 1996 when he proved a mathematical conjecture by the German-born Alexander Grothendieck. Between 1958 and 1973, Labatut writes, Grothendieck convinced the finest minds of his generation to join his radical quest to unearth the structures underlying all mathematical objects. Mochizuki and Grothendieck were both visionaries, and both ended by renouncing mathematics, the former becoming completely unhinged by the heart of the heart, an entity Grothendieck had discovered at the very centre of mathematics What this entity might be, we are not told; but the narrator considers it a thing best kept firmly locked away in Pandoras laboratory.

The second half of Labatuts book is largely taken up with the struggle for supremacy in modern physics between Erwin Schrdinger and Heisenberg. In 1926 Schrdinger formulated an equation which describes, Labatut writes, virtually the whole of modern chemistry and physics; in violent opposition, Heisenberg developed the uncertainty principle, throwing the whole of modern chemistry and physics into doubt, and in the process invented quantum mechanics. There was a price, as Bohr, that crafty magus, foresaw: in philosophical terms, Bohr told Heisenberg that the uncertainty principle was the end of determinism.

No one fully understands quantum theory, since it makes no sense to our common sense minds; but it works, and is at the foundation of most of the significant advances in modern technology. Like Einstein, Schrdinger couldnt be doing with it, and tried all his life to find ways to transcend it.

Which of them was right, Schrdinger or Heisenberg? Both were, possibly, and possibly both were wrong, also, in a world poised upon quanta. Their scientific heirs continue to search for the ToE, or Theory of Everything, a mathematical formula that will unite all five forces, from gravity down to the ties that bind subatomic particles; it is still the grail for physicists everywhere, but the light of that sacred vessel continues to be a tantalising flicker.

The Spanish title of Labatuts book is Un Verdor Terrible roughly, A Terrible Greening and it is a pity some English version of it was not found. The book closes with the night gardener informing the narrator of the manner in which citrus trees die. At the end they produce a monstrous crop, when their fruits ripen all at once, whole limbs break off due to their excessive weight, and after a few weeks the ground is covered with rotting lemons. It is a strange sight, he said, to see such exuberance before death.

Labatut has written a dystopian nonfiction novel set not in the future but in the present. Has modern science and its engine, mathematics, in its drive towards the heart of the heart, already assured our destruction? As Grothendieck put it: The atoms that tore Hiroshima and Nagasaki apart were split not by the greasy fingers of a general, but by a group of physicists armed with a fistful of equations.

Yes, but mother nature, as we see in these times of pandemic, has her own ways of teaching us humility.

When We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamn Labatut, translated by Adrian Nathan West, is published by Pushkin (14.99). To order a copy go to guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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Research Fellow in Quantum Spin Hall Spintronics job with UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS | 225312 – Times Higher Education (THE)

Are you an ambitious researcher in spintronics looking for your next challenge? Do you want to further your career in one of the UKs leading spintronics research groups?

You will join an experimental research project on quantum spin Hall spintronics, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. You will work in a team at the University of Leeds that is led by Prof. Christopher Marrows (School of Physics and Astronomy), and will collaborate with colleagues led by Prof. Edmund Linfield in the School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, as well as our industrial partner, Qinetiq.

You will have an experimental PhD degree, or equivalent, and research experience in Physics and/or Electronic Engineering along with significant experience in the physics of nanomagnetism, semiconductor heterostructures, topological materials, and/or spintronics, ideally in the field of quantum spin Hall materials or related areas.

You will focus on the design and fabrication of semiconductor/ferromagnet heterostructure devices and their measurement by magnetotransport methods. In addition to carrying out a series of research projects, you will be an excellent communicator, responsible for day-to-day interactions with collaborators in both Schools, writing papers, and making presentations. You will sometimes travel to visit project partners and attend conferences in the UK, and overseas, to present your results.

To explore the post further or for any queries you may have, please contact:

Christopher Marrows, Professor of Condensed Matter Physics

Tel: +44 (0)113 343 3780 or email:c.h.marrows@leeds.ac.uk

Location:Leeds - Main CampusFaculty/Service:Faculty of Engineering & Physical SciencesSchool/Institute:School of Physics & AstronomyCategory:ResearchGrade:Grade 7Salary:33,797 to 40,322 p.a.Post Type:Full TimeContractType:Fixed Term (Up to 3.5 years (grant funding))ClosingDate:Sunday 11 October 2020Reference:EPSPA1016Downloads:CandidateBrief

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Research Fellow in Quantum Spin Hall Spintronics job with UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS | 225312 - Times Higher Education (THE)

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The CSIC obtains seven ERC Starting Grants to study topics such as the evolution, the human brain and exoplanets – Science Business

The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) has obtained seven Starting Grants, whichare awarded annually by the European Research Council (ERC). This is the highest number reached by the institution in the same call. These projects, included within the Excellent Science pillar of the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, represent approximately 1.5 million of funding for each project over five years. Leading the projects are Rosa Fernndez and Daniel Richter, both researchers from the Institute of Evolutionary Biology (IBE-CSIC-UPF); Juan Antonio Moreno-Bravo and Flix Leroy, from the Institute of Neurosciences (IN-CSIC-UMH); Can Onur Avci, from the Barcelona Institute of Materials Science (ICMAB-CSIC); Daniele Vigan, researcher at the Institute of Space Sciences (ICE-CSIC), and M Jos Martnez-Prez, from the Institute of Nanoscience and Materials of Aragn (INMA-CSIC-UNIZAR).

The research directed by Rosa Fernndez, from IBE-CSIC-UPF, in the SEA2LAND project aims to study the evolution of land animals and what the genomic milestones have been to move from a marine origin to a land life. To conquer the terrestrial environment, animals radically changed the way they breathe, reproduce, move or smell. And they did it several times in Earth's history. Understanding this process is key to understanding animal biodiversity, says the scientist. "We are going to study whether, as is believed, animals are equipped with a kit of genetic tools that allows them to adapt to ecosystems. To do this we will focus on several questions: which genes facilitated life on Earth, how aquatic and terrestrial animals differ, and how animals reconfigured their genomes to adapt to a dry environment.

GROWCEAN, the other IBE-CSIC-UPF project, aims to characterise the biology, the interactions between species and the ecology of the most abundant and unknown eukaryotic microbial organisms in the oceans, where half of global photosynthesis occurs, explains Daniel Richter. We have three goals: to establish robust laboratory cultures to understand their life history and behaviour, to sequence their transcriptomes at the single-cell level to produce gene catalogues and their potential functions, and to interpret our results to characterise their relevance to the global ecosystem., concludes the scientist.

Juan Antonio Moreno-Bravo, from IN-CSIC-UMH, is the principal investigator of CERCODE, a project that seeks to understand the mechanisms by which the cerebellum could influence the development and function of the cerebral cortex. "The cerebellum plays a critical role in motor function, but also in cognitive development and social behavior, functions mainly associated with the cerebral cortex", comments the researcher. Early alterations of the cerebellum give rise to various neurodevelopmental pathologies, such as autism spectrum disorders. We believe that these cerebellar dysfunctions produce, remotely, cortical alterations. These, in turn, could be the cause of the cognitive deficits present in these disorders. These basic processes and mechanisms are unknown and defining them is key to understanding the involvement of the cerebellum in developmental disorders, he points out.

The IN-CSIC-UMH is also going to develop the MOTIVATEDBEHAVIORS project. As Flix Leroy, the principal investigator, explains, the objective is to study how our cognition the cortex- can regulate the activity of the various hypothalamic nuclei that control basic behaviours such as sociability, aggression, mating or eating. Furthermore, the cortex is implicated in various psychiatric disorders associated with altered social behaviours: schizophrenia, autism or bipolar disorder. To understand both basic neural mechanisms and disease processes, it is essential to understand how memories and decisions regulate low-level motivated behaviours. This information may suggest new approaches to treating abnormal social cognition associated with psychiatric disorders.

Quantum Physics and Exoplanets

MAGNEPIC project, which will have Can Onur Avci as the main researcher and in which the ICMAB-CSIC participates, intends to unite the already established knowledge on magnetic isolators with current experience in spintronics and measurement techniques. As Avci explains, "this project will provide ground-breaking knowledge of magnetic isolators for spintronics and will demonstrate concepts of fast, efficient and innovative devices for manipulating magnetic data in order to improve the sustainability of computing technologies."

Studying the traces of magnetic fields on exoplanets, that is the goal of IMAGINE. "Our project focuses on magnetic fields as a key factor for the habitability of rocky planets, just like on Earth, and as a messenger of the internal composition and dynamics of exoplanets", explains scientist Daniele Vigan, from ICE-CSIC. Combining a novel formulation, detectable radio wave emission studies, and partially imported advanced numerical techniques adapted from the magnetised neutron star scenario, IMAGINE will predict magnetic field values for different exoplanets, comparing the associated observable properties of gas giants and contributing to identify the best candidates for rocky worlds for their habitability, concludes Vigan.

"The purpose of the QFAST project is to investigate quantum properties in stabilised topologically protected magnetic excitations in ferromagnetic microdisks at millikelvin temperatures," says QFAST principal scientist, M Jos Martnez-Prez. The research, in which INMA-CSIC-UNIZAR participates, will start from quantum nanocircuits based on a high critical temperature superconductor. These studies will open new opportunities for future research, for example to transduce between microwaves and optical photons. The results may be relevant for applications of quantum information and dark matter detection, adds the researcher.

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New Proposal Arises for The Theory Of Everything, Reconciling Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity – Webby Feed

Trying to understand how the Universe works doesnt imply studying only the big stuff like stars, galaxies, planets, and so on. Going all the way down to the quantum world is also an important part of the process. But the major problem arises that totally different sets of laws govern the two realms.

Reconciling quantum mechanics with Einsteins General Relativity has been a major challenge for scientists, and theyre still looking to solve the puzzle. But Mr. Vitaly Vanchurin, a physics professor at the University of Minnesota Duluth, comes with an interesting proposal.

Vanchurin proposes that were all living within a massive neural network that governs the way nature operates. The scientist believes that artificial neural networks are capable of exhibiting approximate behaviors of both quantum mechanics and General Relativity. In other words, everything is connected somehow.

We are not just saying that the artificial neural networks can be useful for analyzing physical systems or for discovering physical laws, we are saying that this is how the world around us actually works, says the study paper.

With this respect it could be considered as a proposal for the theory of everything, and as such it should be easy to prove it wrong.

Although further studies are required to clear all doubts, the truth is that scientists still have a lot more to learn even about the atom itself. This fundamental structure can behave both as a particle and as a wave, and nobody can explain why. After close examinations upon the atom by great minds like Niels Bohr, Paul Dirac, Richard Feynman, Albert Einstein, and more, one of the most staggering conclusions is this: the atom is so rebellious that it cannot be represented in any way.

The new study was presented in a preprint uploaded to arXiv.

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Heres why quantum computing is a cat among the pigeons – BusinessLine

Much is made of the virtues of this new technology called quantum computing, which earned itself a special mention and money allocation in Finance Minister Nirmala Sitaramans budget speech of February.

Quantum computers, (fundamentally and not incrementally) different from conventional computers in the core of their working, will be far, far faster than the most complex (exoscale) conventional computers of today.

Good, right? Not quite.

The reason is, quantum computers can pose a grave threat to data security, which has implications not just in privacy and business, but also in defence and national security. Data security today is ensured by encrypting datasort of jumbling everything upwhich can be reversed only at the other end.

But even computers, while encrypting data, follow certain patterns only these patterns are so complex that to copy them would take much more computing power than is available today. That is why today data is safe, if at all.

However, when quantum computers enter the fray (which is likely to be soon), they can decode the encryption, no matter how complex. And, there goes your data security.

Many experts have agonised over this problem in the last few years and now, solutions are coming up. How do you tackle a problem posed by quantum technology? By going back to the same quantum technology for a solution.

IIT-Madras-incubated, Bengaluru-based start-up QNu Labs is among the few companies that have developed a solution. We are both a product and solutions company, says Sunil Gupta, Co-founder & CEO of the company.

The company offers two products for encryption. The quantum random number generator gives complete randomness in encryption keys. Basically, if encryption can be thought of assigning a number to every data point, if the assignment of numbers is not random enough and is based on a formula, a fast computer can potentially read the formula and guess the data. But the quantum random number generator produces truly random numbers, making the data secure.

Another product is the quantum key distributor, which exchanges cryptographic keys over networks. Essentially, these products make eavesdropping impossible.

Gupta says these two products enable the company to offer complete data encryption services to customers. These find application in transfer of data between data centers, securing access to data in the cloud, securing virtual private networks (VPN) and securing blockchain transactions. Businesses such as banks, healthcare providers, pharma companies and, importantly, Defence, are potential customers of QNus services, Gupta told Business Line.

For example, the company has provided some details of its service to the Defence PSU, Bharat Electronics Ltd. BEL used to courier encryption keys manually to every defence field units for safety, but this also meant that the keys could not be refreshed frequently enough.

QNu solved this problem by transporting the encryption keys in a secure way over public network in real time. It estimates potential saving of 100 crore to BEL.

Gupta says the market for quantum encryption is about to boom. One estimate puts it at $ 25 billion by 2025. The start-up is about to scale up and is in the market to raise funds. About $ 5-7 million, Gupta said.

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The Hyperion-insideHPC Interviews: ORNL Distinguished Scientist Travis Humble on Coupling Classical and Quantum Computing – insideHPC

Oak Ridge National Labs Travis Humble has worked at the headwaters of quantum computing research for years. In this interview, he talks about his particular areas of interest, including integration of quantum computing with classical HPC systems. Weve already recognized that we can accelerate solving scientific applications using quantum computers, he says. These demonstrations are just early examples of how we expect quantum computers can take us to the most challenging problems for scientific discovery.

In This Update. From the HPC User Forum Steering Committee

By Steve Conway and Thomas Gerard

After the global pandemic forced Hyperion Research to cancel the April 2020 HPC User Forum planned for Princeton, New Jersey, we decided to reach out to the HPC community in another way by publishing a series of interviews with leading members of the worldwide HPC community. Our hope is that these seasoned leaders perspectives on HPCs past, present and future will be interesting and beneficial to others. To conduct the interviews, Hyperion Research engaged insideHPC Media. We welcome comments and questions addressed to Steve Conway, sconway@hyperionres.com or Earl Joseph, ejoseph@hyperionres.com.

This interview is with Travis Humble, Deputy Director at the Department of Energys Quantum Science Center, a Distinguished Scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and director of the labs Quantum Computing Institute. Travis is leading the development of new quantum technologies and infrastructure to impact the DOE mission of scientific discovery through quantum computing. He is editor-in-chief for ACM Transactions on Quantum Computing, Associate Editor for Quantum Information Processing, and co-chair of the IEEE Quantum Initiative. Travis also holds a joint faculty appointment with the University of Tennessee Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education, where he works with students in developing energy-efficient computing solutions. He received his doctorate in theoretical chemistry from the University of Oregon before joining ORNL in 2005.

The HPC User Forum was established in 1999 to promote the health of the global HPC industry and address issues of common concern to users. More than 75 HPC User Forum meetings have been held in the Americas, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region since the organizations founding in 2000.

Doug Black: Hi, everyone. Im Doug Black. Im editor-in-chief at InsideHPC and today we are talking with Dr. Travis Humble. He is a distinguished scientist at Oak Ridge National Lab, where he is director of the labs Quantum Computing Institute. Dr. Humble, welcome. Thanks for joining us today.

Travis Humble: Thanks for having me on, Doug.

Black: Travis, tell us, if you would, the area of quantum computing that youre working in and the research that youre doing that youre most excited about, that has what you would regard as the greatest potential.

Humble: Quantum computing is a really exciting area, so its really hard to narrow it down to just one example. This is the intersection of quantum informationquantum mechanicswith computer science.

Weve already recognized that we can accelerate solving scientific applications using quantum computers. At Oak Ridge, for example, we have already demonstrated examples in chemistry, material science and high-energy physics, where we can use quantum computers to solve problems in those areas. These demonstrations are just early examples of how we expect quantum computers can take us to the most challenging problems for scientific discovery.

My own research is actually focused on how we could integrate quantum computers with high-performance computing systems. Of course, we are adopting an accelerator model at Oak Ridge, where we are thinking about using quantum processors to offload the most challenging computational tasks. Now, this seems like an obvious approach; the best of both worlds. But the truth is that there are a lot of challenges in bringing those two systems together.

Black: It sounds like sort of a hybrid approach, almost a CPU/GPU, only were talking about systems writ large. Tell us about DOEs and Oak Ridges overall quantum strategy and how the Quantum Computing Institute works with vendors and academic institutions on quantum technology development.

Humble: The Oak Ridge National Laboratory has played an important role within the DOEs national laboratory system, a leading role in both research and infrastructure. In 2018, the President announced the National Quantum Initiative, which is intended to accelerate the development of quantum science and technology in the United States. Oak Ridge has taken the lead in the development of research, especially software applications and hardware, for how quantum computing can address scientific discovery.

At the same time, weve helped DOE establish a quantum computing user program; something we call QCUP. This is administered through the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility and it looks for the best of the best in terms of approaches to how quantum computers could be used for scientific discovery. We provide access to the users through the user program in order for them to test and evaluate how quantum computers might be used to solve problems in basic energy science, nuclear physics, and other areas.

Black: Okay, great. So how far would you we are from practical quantum computing and from what is referred to as quantum advantage, where quantum systems can run workloads faster than conventional or classical supercomputers?

Humble: This is such a great question. Quantum advantage, of course, is the idea that a quantum computer would be able to outperform any other conventional computing system on the planet. Very early in this fiscal year, back in October, there was an announcement from Google where they actually demonstrated an example of quantum advantage using their quantum computing hardware processor. Oak Ridge was part of that announcement, because we used our Summit supercomputer system as the baseline to compare that calculation.

But heres the rub: the Google demonstration was primarily a diagnostic check that their processor was behaving as expected, and the Summit supercomputer actually couldnt keep up with that type of diagnostic check. But when we look at the practical applications of quantum computing, still focusing on problems in chemistry, material science and other scientific disciplines, we appear to still be a few years away from demonstrating a quantum advantage for those applications. This is one of the hottest topics in the field at the moment, though. Once somebody can identify that, we expect to see a great breakthrough in how quantum computers can be used in these practical areas.

Black: Okay. So, how did you become involved in quantum in the first place? Tell us a little bit about your background in technology.

Humble: I started early on studying quantum mechanics through chemistry. My focus, early on in research, was on theoretical chemistry and understanding how molecules behave quantum mechanically. What has turned out to be one of the greatest ironies of my career is that quantum computers are actually significant opportunities to solve chemistry problems using quantum mechanics.

So I got involved in quantum computing relatively early. Certainly, the last 15 years or so have been a roller coaster ride, mainly going uphill in terms of developing quantum computers and looking at the question of how they can intersect with high-performance computing. Being at Oak Ridge, thats just a natural question for me to come across. I work every day with people who are using some of the worlds fastest supercomputers in order to solve the same types of problems that we think quantum computers would be best at. So for me, the intersection between those two areas just seems like a natural path to go down.

Black: I see. Are there any other topics related to all this that youd like to add?

Humble: I think that quantum computing has a certain mystique around it. Its an exciting area and it relies on a field of physics that many people dont yet know about, but I certainly anticipate that in the future thats going to change. This is a topic that is probably going to impact everyones lives. Maybe its 10 years from now, maybe its 20 years, but its certainly something that I think we should start preparing for in the long term, and Oak Ridge is really happy to be one of the places that is helping to lead that change.

Black: Thanks so much for your time. It was great to talk with you.

Humble: Thanks so much, Doug. It was great to talk with you, too.

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