US scientists teleport energy, store it using quantum computers – The researchers used quantum computer to simulate how energy could be teleported and stored in a qubit.
US scientists teleport energy, store it using quantum computers – The researchers used quantum computer to simulate how energy could be teleported and stored in a qubit.
>Quantum physics is still an emerging field, and much remains unknown about what can be accomplished. Scientists in the field keep proposing new theories that are tested extensively before they become laws that govern our understanding of the field.
>One such law states that a perfectly perfect space does not exist in the quantum realm. Even if the space were cleaned up of the tiniest of atoms, tiny flickers of quantum fields would still remain in it and even have quantum properties such as entanglement.
Also from the article
>When researchers attempted Hotta’s experiments, they were indeed able to teleport the energy, but they hit a new hurdle. The teleported energy leaked into the environment was lost and could not be stored.
>A research team led by Sabre Kais, a chemistry, electrical, and computer engineering professor at Purdue University in the US, now has a solution using quantum computing.
~200 years from now there will be breakthroughs that will be unfathomable leaps for humanity.
The question is, will we self destruct well before?
ProfessorCagan on
If matter is energy, could we break an object down, and store it in a quantum computer? Like, let’s say we have an iron rod, solid, 1 foot long, 1 inch diameter. Could we store that? How much energy would be inside that rod?
Jean-Claude-Can-Ham on
See, this is a good post because it provides context to the amazing claim in the original headline
washingtonandmead on
So….how many qubits would it take to save the genetic information of 2 of every animal on the planet earth. Maybe 300x50x30 worth?
TheMadManThatLaughs on
Making wireless energy
Making nicola tesla proud
Ps i know i horrible mispelt his name but im writing this at 2am
Potocobe on
The headline simultaneously says they did it and that they simulated doing it. Which is it?
Gakoknight on
Growing up, I liked the concept that while I didn’t understand the the deeper stuff, I could sort of understand how different things in the world functioned in relation to physics. This quantum stuff is just straight up magic to me.
D-inventa on
ahhh yes friends…..the beginning of the end of our “physical forms”. Enjoy the time we’ve got.
I-Ponder on
These headlines are like technobabble from sci-fi shows. Just nonsense and shows how little they actually researched their topic.
10 Comments
From the article
>Quantum physics is still an emerging field, and much remains unknown about what can be accomplished. Scientists in the field keep proposing new theories that are tested extensively before they become laws that govern our understanding of the field.
>One such law states that a perfectly perfect space does not exist in the quantum realm. Even if the space were cleaned up of the tiniest of atoms, tiny flickers of quantum fields would still remain in it and even have quantum properties such as entanglement.
Also from the article
>When researchers attempted Hotta’s experiments, they were indeed able to teleport the energy, but they hit a new hurdle. The teleported energy leaked into the environment was lost and could not be stored.
>A research team led by Sabre Kais, a chemistry, electrical, and computer engineering professor at Purdue University in the US, now has a solution using quantum computing.
>Kais’ team solved the energy storage problem using the most basic quantum computing component, [quantum bits](https://interestingengineering.com/innovation/million-qubit-chips-quantum-computer) or qubits. In their experiment, the researchers used qubits in their lowest energy state.
~200 years from now there will be breakthroughs that will be unfathomable leaps for humanity.
The question is, will we self destruct well before?
If matter is energy, could we break an object down, and store it in a quantum computer? Like, let’s say we have an iron rod, solid, 1 foot long, 1 inch diameter. Could we store that? How much energy would be inside that rod?
See, this is a good post because it provides context to the amazing claim in the original headline
So….how many qubits would it take to save the genetic information of 2 of every animal on the planet earth. Maybe 300x50x30 worth?
Making wireless energy
Making nicola tesla proud
Ps i know i horrible mispelt his name but im writing this at 2am
The headline simultaneously says they did it and that they simulated doing it. Which is it?
Growing up, I liked the concept that while I didn’t understand the the deeper stuff, I could sort of understand how different things in the world functioned in relation to physics. This quantum stuff is just straight up magic to me.
ahhh yes friends…..the beginning of the end of our “physical forms”. Enjoy the time we’ve got.
These headlines are like technobabble from sci-fi shows. Just nonsense and shows how little they actually researched their topic.