Seeing the quantum world
Barry Sanders
Quantum physics is both mysterious and difficult to grasp. Barry
Sanders, director of the U of C’s Institute for Quantum Information
Science, is hoping to change that.
Sanders, who is also the iCORE Chair of Quantum
Information Science, has produced a four-minute animated movie with a
team of animators and scientists. The film is intended for funding
agencies, the public, and interdisciplinary teams building quantum
computers, so they can see how a quantum computer would work and its
underlying science.
For the first time, a detailed description on the
making of Sanders’ animation—Solid State Quantum Computer in
Silicon—was published this month in the New Journal of Physics. This
issue is devoted to the leading uses of visualization in astrophysics,
biophysics, geophysics, medical physics and quantum physics and Sanders
is one the guest editors for this issue.
“The goal of our animated movie about the quantum
computer is to convey to a non-expert audience the nature of quantum
computation: its power, how it would work, what it would look like,”
says Sanders, who also has an article published in the December issue
of Physics World on the making of his four-minute animation.
Click graphic to watch a few clips from Sanders' movie.
“The animation incorporates state-of-the-art techniques to show the
science and the technology in the most accurate and exciting way
possible while being true to the underlying principles of quantum
computing,” says Sanders.
The animated movie was completed last year but the clips have not been publicly distributed before now.
Quantum computers harness the power of atoms and molecules and have the
potential to calculate significantly faster than any existing computer
could. Some hard computational problems that can't be solved ever by
foreseeable computers become easily solved on quantum computers, which
could make today’s secure communication obsolete. Basic quantum
computers that can perform certain calculations exist; but a practical
quantum computer is still years away.
“There is a history of simple visualization over the
last century to convey quantum concepts,” says Sanders. He notes that
Erwin Schrödinger introduced his eponymous cat, which is left in a
tragic state of being in a superposition of life and death, an
illustration of the strangeness of quantum theory. And the uncertainty
principle associated with Werner Heisenberg and his fictional gamma ray
microscope, has found its way into common English parlance.
“The imagery of the early days of quantum mechanics
played a crucial role in understanding and accepting quantum theory.
Our work takes this imagery a quantum leap forward by using the
state-of-the-art animation techniques to explain clearly and quickly
the nature of quantum computing which is, by its very nature,
counterintuitive.”
Sanders’s film will not be released to the public in
its entirety, but segments can be viewed freely viewed in the December
2008 issue of the New Journal of Physics.
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