Architectures could support quantum-chemistry simulations
The past and future are the same thing | feynman on time symmetry.
Discover one of physics’ most mind-bending secrets: the fundamental laws of nature don’t know which way time flows! In this exploration of Feynman’s ideas on time symmetry, we dive deep into how the equations of physics work equally well forwards and backwards, why positrons are electrons moving backward through time, and how the Wheeler-Feynman absorber theory suggests the future might influence the past.
From billiard balls to quantum mechanics, from Maxwell’s equations to the mystery of why we remember yesterday but not tomorrow, this video unravels the beautiful symmetry hidden beneath our everyday experience of time.
Topics Covered:
• Time symmetry in fundamental physics
• Positrons as electrons traveling backward in time
• Wheeler-Feynman absorber theory
• The thermodynamic arrow of time
• Path integral formulation and quantum mechanics
• Why time appears to flow in one direction
• CP violation and the weak nuclear force.
Perfect for physics enthusiasts, students, and anyone curious about the nature of time and reality.
⚠️ DISCLAIMER: This is AI-generated content created in the style of Richard Feynman’s teaching approach. The script synthesizes information from various sources about Feynman’s work and ideas in theoretical physics, including his lectures, published papers, and documented contributions to quantum electrodynamics and time-symmetric theories. While based on authentic concepts from Feynman’s career, this is an educational interpretation and not actual recorded material from Richard Feynman.
Researchers in the UC Santa Barbara Materials Department have uncovered the elusive quantum mechanism by which energetic electrons break chemical bonds inside microelectronic devices—a detrimental process that slowly degrades performance over time. The discovery, published as an Editors’ Suggestion in Physical Review B, explains decades-old experimental puzzles and moves scientists closer to engineering more reliable devices.
Physicists have proposed a new way to make neutrinos at accelerated rates. This method would use a state of matter close to absolute zero called a Bose-Einstein condensate. It would harness quantum effects that can produce neutrinos faster than ordinary radioactive decays. This tool would produce a large and controllable beam of neutrinos. They could have similar properties to photons (particles of light) in an optical laser.
Neutrinos are fundamental particles that interact extremely weakly with matter. It is very difficult to produce and detect neutrinos. It requires large detectors and powerful sources such as nuclear reactors or particle accelerators. A controllable, coherent source of neutrinos on a bench-top scale would have a significant impact on neutrino research. This type of technology would provide new opportunities to understand their interactions and quantum mechanical properties. In addition, the specific radioactive decays that would enable such a controllable, coherent neutrino source on a small scale could lead to new applications. These applications could include production of rare isotopes for medical physics and neutrino-based communication.
Lasers have been revolutionary in enabling the development of many aspects of modern science and technology. They are based on the amplification of light via stimulated emission. This is a quantum mechanical process whereby an excited atom is forced to emit a second photon upon absorption of another with the same wavelength. Due to their tiny masses, neutrinos behave similarly to photons in many situations. However, they cannot be used for lasing because their fermionic nature inhibits stimulated emission. For this reason, it is not possible to develop a neutrino laser using this traditional mechanism.
Physicists explored the concept of negative time, finding it wasn’t just an illusion but potentially described actual physical phenomena. Discover the surprising results of quantum trajectory calculations. #Physics #Science #QuantumMechanics #NegativeTime Full podcast with Prof. Aephraim Steinberg: https://youtu.be/cOZ3Kto6NIc …
What happens when gravity crushes a dead star so completely that atoms themselves are destroyed? Inside a white dwarf, matter enters a state so extreme that the normal rules of physics no longer apply. The familiar categories — solid, liquid, gas — all break down. What holds the star up is not heat, not fusion, not any force you encounter in everyday life. It is a quantum mechanical rule about electrons that most people have never heard of: the Pauli exclusion principle.
In this calming long-form science documentary, we explore what white dwarfs really are, why their matter is millions of times denser than anything on Earth, and how a law governing subatomic particles can hold up an object with the mass of the sun. We break down electron degeneracy pressure in physically intuitive terms, explain why these stellar remnants can cool for trillions of years without ever collapsing, and reveal the Chandrasekhar limit — the critical mass threshold beyond which even quantum mechanics loses its battle against gravity, leading to some of the most violent explosions in the universe.
From the death of sun-like stars to the far future of the cosmos, this is the story of matter pushed to its absolute limit.
Sources and Further Reading:
Chandrasekhar, S. (1931). \
An AI model informed by calculations from a quantum computer can better predict the behavior of a complex physical system over the long term than current best models that use only conventional computers, according to a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. The findings, published in the journal Science Advances, could improve models predicting how liquids and gases move and interact (fluid dynamics), used in areas ranging from climate science to transport, medicine and energy generation.
The researchers say the improved performance is linked to a quantum device’s ability to hold a large amount of information more efficiently. That is because instead of bits that are switched on or off, 1 or 0, as in a classical computer, the quantum computer’s qubits can be 1, 0, or any state in between, and each qubit can affect any of the other qubits—meaning a few qubits can generate a vast number of possible states.
Senior author Professor Peter Coveney, based in UCL Chemistry and the Advanced Research Computing Center at UCL, said, To make predictions about complex systems, we can either run a full simulation, which might take weeks—often too long to be useful—or we can use an AI model, which is quicker but more unreliable over longer time scales.
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To progress to the next level in understanding reality, we need to combine quantum mechanics and Einstein’s general relativity. And to do that, most physicists believe we need a theory of quantum gravity… which means we need gravitons. But it also seems like the laws of physics make it impossible to ever detect this quantum particle of gravity. Almost like the universe is set up to keep the final answer forever out of our reach. So, can we outsmart the universe, catch a graviton, and finally solve physics?
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