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Sep 19, 2016
Quantum Teleportation Just Happened For Real
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: internet, particle physics, quantum physics
I remember when this was announced last year; however, I am glad to see the topic highlighted again especially after China’s launch of their Quantum Satellite.
Quantum teleportation is the mystical, far-off in the future idea where quantum information encoded into particles of light can be transferred from one place to another remotely. Except it’s not far-off in the future — it just happened. Teleportation is real and it is here.
The teleportation occurred over several kilometres of optical fibre networks in the cities of Hefei in China and Calgary in Canada.
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Sep 19, 2016
Quantum computing will make your PC look like a graphing calculator
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, education, quantum physics
Winfried Hensinger likes Star Trek. “It goes all the way back to primary school,” said the director of the Sussex Centre for Quantum Technologies in England. “I wanted to be science officer on the Enterprise, so I worked out in about grade five that I wanted to study physics.”
Today, his day-to-day work on abstract notions of quantum mechanics would make even Spock’s ears perk up.
Continue reading “Quantum computing will make your PC look like a graphing calculator” »
Sep 19, 2016
How do we create a Quantum Internet?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: internet, quantum physics
Sep 19, 2016
OPINION — Quantum physics provides new world perspective
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: education, mathematics, quantum physics
If I had to pick my least favorite subject in high school, it would be physics.
The concepts themselves were challenging. The math was even more challenging.
However, my views on physics quickly changed when my teacher mentioned the words “quantum mechanics.”
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Sep 19, 2016
China’s Newly Launched SpaceLab Empowers Human Brain/Computer Interaction –“Can Transmit Astronauts’ Thoughts into Operations”
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, neuroscience, space
No surprise; we knew this was going to happen.
China launched its second space lab, Tiangong-2, on Thursday, paving the way for a permanent space station that the country plans to build around 2022. In a space science first, a human brain-computer interaction test system, developed by Tianjin University, has been installed in the lab and it is set to conduct a series of experiments in space, People’s Daily reported. According to Ming Dong, the leader of the research team in charge of the brain-computer test system, the brain-computer interaction will eventually be the highest form of human-machine communication.
Sep 19, 2016
Taming photons, electrons paves way for quantum internet
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: internet, quantum physics
Sep 19, 2016
Science breakthrough – light particles teleported across cities
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: particle physics, quantum physics, science, space travel
Scientists have shown they can teleport matter across a city, a development that has been hailed as “a technological breakthrough”.
However, do not expect to see something akin to the Star Trek crew beaming from the planet’s surface to the Starship Enterprise.
Instead, in the two studies, published today in Nature Photonics, separate research groups have used quantum teleportation to send photons to new locations using fibre-optic communications networks in the cities of Hefei in China and Calgary in Canada.
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Sep 19, 2016
The United Nations: What’s the Point? — By Uri Friedman | The Atlantic
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: governance, innovation
“History “teaches us that order in international relations is the exception, rather than the rule,” Kevin Rudd, the former Australian prime minister, writes in a new report on the uncertain future of the UN.”
Tag: United Nations
Sep 19, 2016
Interview: Margaret Anstee – first woman to become UN Under-Secretary-General | UN News Centre
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in category: governance
““A woman of firsts” is perhaps only a summary description of Dame Margaret Anstee, the first woman to serve as a United Nations Under-Secretary-General.”
Tag: United Nations