Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Part I An overview of the contributions of John Archibald Wheeler
- Part II An historian's tribute to John Archibald Wheeler and scientific speculation through the ages
- Part III Quantum reality: theory
- Part IV Quantum reality: experiment
- 11 Why the quantum? “It” from “bit”? A participatory universe? Three far-reaching challenges from John Archibald Wheeler and their relation to experiment
- 12 Speakable and unspeakable, past and future
- 13 Conceptual tensions between quantum mechanics and general relativity: are there experimental consequences?
- 14 Breeding nonlocal Schrödinger cats: a thought-experiment to explore the quantum–classical boundary
- 15 Quantum erasing the nature of reality: or, perhaps, the reality of nature?
- 16 Quantum feedback and the quantum–classical transition
- 17 What quantum computers may tell us about quantum mechanics
- Part V Big questions in cosmology
- Part VI Emergence, life, and related topics
- Appendix A Science and Ultimate Reality Program Committees
- Appendix B Young Researchers Competition in honor of John Archibald Wheeler for physics graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and young faculty
- Index
14 - Breeding nonlocal Schrödinger cats: a thought-experiment to explore the quantum–classical boundary
from Part IV - Quantum reality: experiment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Editors' preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Part I An overview of the contributions of John Archibald Wheeler
- Part II An historian's tribute to John Archibald Wheeler and scientific speculation through the ages
- Part III Quantum reality: theory
- Part IV Quantum reality: experiment
- 11 Why the quantum? “It” from “bit”? A participatory universe? Three far-reaching challenges from John Archibald Wheeler and their relation to experiment
- 12 Speakable and unspeakable, past and future
- 13 Conceptual tensions between quantum mechanics and general relativity: are there experimental consequences?
- 14 Breeding nonlocal Schrödinger cats: a thought-experiment to explore the quantum–classical boundary
- 15 Quantum erasing the nature of reality: or, perhaps, the reality of nature?
- 16 Quantum feedback and the quantum–classical transition
- 17 What quantum computers may tell us about quantum mechanics
- Part V Big questions in cosmology
- Part VI Emergence, life, and related topics
- Appendix A Science and Ultimate Reality Program Committees
- Appendix B Young Researchers Competition in honor of John Archibald Wheeler for physics graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and young faculty
- Index
Summary
Introduction: about quanta, atoms, photons, and cats
Experiments which manipulate and study isolated quantum systems have come of age. We can now trap single atoms or photons in a box, entangle them together, observe directly their quantum jumps, and realize in this way some of the thought-experiments imagined by the founding fathers of quantum physics. Schrödinger, who believed that observing an atom so to speak in vivo would remain forever impossible (Schrödinger 1952), would have been amazed, could he have seen what experimenters now achieve by manipulating atoms with lasers. These experiments are not just textbook illustrations of quantum concepts. They are considered by many as first steps towards harnessing the quantum world and realizing classically impossible tasks A quantum computer, for instance, would be a machine using quantum interference effects at a macroscopic scale in order to perform massive parallelism in computation (Nielsen and Chuang 2000). It would achieve an exponential speed-up to solve some problems such as the factoring of large numbers (Shor 1994). Such a machine would manipulate large ensembles of “quantum bits” made of atoms, molecules, or photons. Each bit would evolve in a superposition of two states labeled as “0” and “1”. These bits would be entangled together by quantum gates exploiting electromagnetic interactions between them. The behavior of this machine would be strange and counterintuitive. It would be a system made of thousands of two-level particles following during the calculation a huge number of different routes among which it remains coherently suspended.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Science and Ultimate RealityQuantum Theory, Cosmology, and Complexity, pp. 280 - 305Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004