How Physicists Created a Holographic Wormhole in a Quantum Computer

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
  • UPDATE: In February 2023, an independent team of physicists presented evidence that the research described in this video did not create any wormholes, holographic or otherwise. Read our coverage of these developments at Quanta Magazine: www.quantamagazine.org/wormho...
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    Almost a century ago, Albert Einstein realized that the equations of general relativity could produce wormholes. But it would take a number of theoretical leaps and a “crazy” team of experimentalists to build one on Google's quantum computer. Read the full article at Quanta Magazine: www.quantamagazine.org/physic...
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    Quanta Magazine is an editorially independent publication supported by the Simons Foundation www.simonsfoundation.org/
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Komentáře • 4,8K

  • @QuantaScienceChannel
    @QuantaScienceChannel  Před rokem +172

    UPDATE: In February 2023, an independent team of physicists presented evidence that the research described in this video did not create any wormholes, holographic or otherwise. Read our coverage of these developments at Quanta Magazine: www.quantamagazine.org/wormhole-experiment-called-into-question-20230323/

    • @underarm
      @underarm Před rokem +27

      Ow Shi-

    • @alanarcher
      @alanarcher Před rokem +39

      Thus once again showing we should never jump the gun when it comes to (good) science.

    • @armandoolivares7467
      @armandoolivares7467 Před rokem

      So can u stick your finger in it??

    • @noam65
      @noam65 Před rokem +10

      How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?
      Let me try to understand the experiment, a physically reproducible thing was compared to what, exactly?
      The folks striking it down, at least from the article rebutting the experiment, seem completely disconnected from basic concepts of what a hologram is. Am I the only one finding this distressing?
      I'm a layman. I'm probably missing something. Can someone explain this more simply?
      In the meantime, I reject this seemingly amorphous response, as it has no physical foundation. It can't be, because it can't be, makes no sense to me.
      There is an additional problem. The video was created for general consumption. The response was not, in my opinion.

    • @KillerCombow
      @KillerCombow Před rokem +20

      @@noam65 The main argument seems to be that the indicator that the first group was looking for to validate the results of their experiment which is "perfect side-winding" naturally occur in simulations with 7 or less terms anyways. This means that the first group would need to use a much more advanced quantum computer to actually validate their results.

  • @kozumemansi
    @kozumemansi Před rokem +3179

    as somebody who comes from a country where research is not appreciated enough by most universities, videos like these really motivate me to keep up with my curiosity and perhaps do something of my own one day, thankyou quanta magazine, love from india.

    • @kanishkchaturvedi1745
      @kanishkchaturvedi1745 Před rokem +145

      Indian student here who went to America for physics. First this video is pure mumbo jumbo, not an iota of science explained. Second ,some sobering advice. Unless you're confident you'll be leagues better than your competition and will get funded for the entire ~20 year journey of student to government scientist/tenured professor don't waste your money. Being a theorist in India is a much better option. Also most researchers fail. I know I am being discouraging but I feel I would have greatly benefited if I had known reality before going to the US with dreams and coming back to India with poor health and debt. Physics curiosity can always be satiated with from proper YT channels like pbs spacetime and Sabine. I also take long walks with people pursuing physics phds in US and we obtain fascinating insights into quantum theory on our walks. Sure a paper with my name attached to it is not a consequence of my progess with theory but atleast my friends are being helped for their papers- while I am not slaving away doing nightmarishly hard equations in hope of maintaining good grades

    • @kozumemansi
      @kozumemansi Před rokem +70

      Thankyou so much for taking your time to write this out, i completely agree with what you are concerned about but what i meant by saying that i will keep up my curiosity was the curiosity to learn, i'am currently studying in the 12th grade and have been preparing for entrance exams for the past two years and something that i have observed in these years by attending certain coaching institutions is how the teachers never want to let our curiosity to know more about the subject we are studying about grow instead call us stupid for wasting our time for indulging into these theories instead of solving numericals that could get us the marks that we need to get into these so called top educational institutions which again is not inherently a bad thing and that's their job to guide us to score as much as we can after all we enrolled in these courses because we want to score better but at times it feels extremely discouraging because why the hell are we even studying these subject when all we are allowed to do is to perform into a calculated boundary that will apparently help us succeed, I know this might sound childish as i have not experienced the real world at all and i do not completely understand the practicality of it all but well as of now i just simply want to study more about a subject rather than only solving numerous number of modules where the only thing i'am trying to run after is a numerical value instead of actually understanding the theory and applicability of the said subject.

    • @Allenmarshall
      @Allenmarshall Před rokem +35

      @@kanishkchaturvedi1745 That doesn't line up with the physicists I know (my father and two scientists at fermilab). I wonder what could have been done differently for you?

    • @infidel202
      @infidel202 Před rokem +12

      @Allen our understanding of physics is only just starting same with our understanding of mathematics, why limit when you can explore, two hundred years ago the earth was supposed to be flat, yes mistakes will happen but isn't that part of how we learn, we are laying the foundations of the next two hundred years, be brave be proud of being wrong so we can learn from it

    • @streampunksheep
      @streampunksheep Před rokem +2

      what country you from?

  • @amorosogombe9650
    @amorosogombe9650 Před rokem +3635

    I can't believe I'm living in the age of real artificial wormholes. And yes. This looks like a Nobel prize for sure.

    • @soueucaasi
      @soueucaasi Před rokem +158

      if you were being sarcastic it would've been funny lol

    • @WorksopGimp
      @WorksopGimp Před rokem +53

      For a mathematical formula realy, black holes are still a mathematical equation

    • @evolvedfish
      @evolvedfish Před rokem +13

      @@soueucaasi Why?

    • @soueucaasi
      @soueucaasi Před rokem +35

      @@evolvedfish just thought of it while reading it, if not serious it would've been a great form of sarcasm nothing besides a thought tho lol

    • @realist4859
      @realist4859 Před rokem +17

      Such a comment kinda requires you to understand some pretty complex shit. I'd love to gain insights there, pls share!

  • @dentonfender6492
    @dentonfender6492 Před rokem +760

    "We'll learn something by trying", the most important statement in this video. Research is never a waste of time, and money!

    • @edgepixel8467
      @edgepixel8467 Před rokem

      No. In the end, the USA is gonna teleport military hardware straight to Andromeda. You know, for democracy and liberty.

    • @michaelmccarthy2369
      @michaelmccarthy2369 Před rokem +2

      You need to repent in the name of Jesus christ.

    • @dentonfender6492
      @dentonfender6492 Před rokem +12

      @@michaelmccarthy2369 You need to stop worshiping money! Jesus stated:"Its simpler for a Camel to fit through the eye of a needle than for a rich man (like Elon Musk, your reverend, and you if rich) to enter the kingdom of heaven".

    • @nullllllllllllllllllllllllllll
      @nullllllllllllllllllllllllllll Před rokem +4

      Sometimes it is, but even when it is, it isnt! You learn you're at the wrong tree or in the entirely wrong forest, but you learn something at least.

    • @xw39
      @xw39 Před rokem +1

      Maybe not never. Learning and evolving is not only important but necessary. What’s also necessary is that every living person is fed. If your putting in millions of dollars just to learn about the universe or time or this or that. Then you should atleast feed the people that need food first.

  • @emanresu4720
    @emanresu4720 Před rokem +102

    This is my field of work, quantum hardware (PhD). Thanks for covering this topic. I participate in both the technical and non-technical coverage of quantum hardware. On that note, I'll be delivering some invited quantum hardware lecture series on the machines/chips we've been building at my research lab and more. It will be open to the public next week on April 12th with my IBM friends and QuantumGrad. You are all welcomed to join us to learn about what tools and equipment we use to build real quantum devices in the field. Ignore the naysayers, let's keep building and learning from what we build. -Onri the Diné Quantum Engineer

    • @ryancabral6294
      @ryancabral6294 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Do you have any saved recordings of the lectures?

    • @dodgydave1053
      @dodgydave1053 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I'd be interested, working with Artiq and QICK right now

    • @ricomajestic
      @ricomajestic Před 10 dny

      Would love to see your lectures on quantum hardware.

    • @emanresu4720
      @emanresu4720 Před 10 dny

      @@ricomajestic copypaste lol

  • @TheStringBreaker
    @TheStringBreaker Před rokem +1023

    *Credit to the animators as well! Phenomenal work!*

    • @garbagestarkaloyan
      @garbagestarkaloyan Před rokem +25

      Yes. That is what I was thinking. It is a great pleasure to watch the video.

    • @Allenmarshall
      @Allenmarshall Před rokem +2

      Here here!

    • @nickc3657
      @nickc3657 Před rokem +2

      Science artists and illustrators are such awesome people!!

    • @publicspace234
      @publicspace234 Před rokem

      Agreed! Beautiful video. The textures and illustrations look fantastic.

    • @bamf6603
      @bamf6603 Před rokem

      Hahaha i bet this dude will regret this when he gets home.

  • @alfredsutton4412
    @alfredsutton4412 Před rokem +915

    As an old physicist, I’m amazed. The video did a great job of explaining the history and the experiment.

    • @martinlawrence4200
      @martinlawrence4200 Před rokem +1

      Einstein Rosen bridge. Inside is outside. That´s all.

    • @heyitsdrew
      @heyitsdrew Před rokem +17

      they didn't explain the math. all they did was show a graph and say this is that. so to explain it they need to go deeper. all this video did was scratch the surface.
      and they didn't really explain the consequences. so both ER and EPR theories are still just theories. they it exist in a simulation of non-reality. good for them they were able to prove something, but it's like saying Luke Skywalker is a jedi. yes that is true, Luke is a jedi, but it's not true in the sense he's a fictional character.
      so what are they trying to solve? what else are they or can they prove?
      we already know spooky action at a distance can be observed and measured. even the greatest scientist Einstein has lied to us before. he made an equation seem as though the universe always existed. but he was called out for it. because if the universe has a definite beginning, which it does, it means an almighty infinite creator God willed it into existence. Think about how God knows everything and can be everywhere at once. is that what science is trying to prove when religion beat them to it?
      "For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance, he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries."

    • @lloran7
      @lloran7 Před rokem

      ​@@heyitsdrew It solves Einstein's hope to unify General Relativity and Qauntum Physics, DUUUUHHH ! You might as well ASK WHY Einstein spent his last couples of years of his life trying to unify General Relativity and Qauntum Physics, until he dies and still cannot come up with any solution to this problem. And we are talking about the unprecedented Genius Albert Einstein here, the father of the robust physics field of science here.
      And you bring up GOD to this hardcore scientific community. My God you are clueless.

    • @neonblack211
      @neonblack211 Před rokem +4

      @@heyitsdrew its probably going to take a long time befopre the implications are fully understood and if its a real phenomenon or not

    • @golbez3794
      @golbez3794 Před rokem +1

      you're actually buying this?

  • @sowrabhsudevan9119
    @sowrabhsudevan9119 Před rokem +34

    Quanta magazine has such amazing production quality. Would be great if they could also make longer videos, that could go a little bit more into the technical details.

    • @loulimibarney3435
      @loulimibarney3435 Před 6 měsíci +1

      They sure do make great visuals, would be good if they could include some scientific content as well.

  • @Thor_the_Doge
    @Thor_the_Doge Před rokem +15

    I want a however-many-hours-is-needed video that explains this in as much detail as possible so that I can actually understand what they mean under a "holographic traversable wormhole made in a quantum computer"
    Like is it some equation that said the qubit traversed through?
    Did they create a 2d/3d virtual wormhole and sent a virtual object through?
    etc

    • @gravity00x
      @gravity00x Před rokem +1

      you would be disappointed to know the real answer to your questions. this whole ordeal is nothing but a big pile of steaming garbage. a gimmick if you will with no real world evidence. its a made up scenario of something that nobody knows (black hole physics) or has evidence for. the internals of a black hole could be anything, for all we know. making up a set of rules of your own to PROVE that a BH is also a Wormhole without actually having any evidence for it is just pure....????? what do you even call this. its not even an entertaining movie but a bumch of """scientists""" having a big mastah-bation session over something they made up and find very cool, but which sadly doesnt exist and probably never will.

    • @v2ike6udik
      @v2ike6udik Před měsícem

      They will not. If they find, they will not tell. Meanwhile, if you do not know yet, you can have this portal inside you. Remote view. And HD version, everything in focus. Zoom capabilities. I accidentally induced the state. Portal did not close for 4h. Tried to close it with my mind. Ups. I went through.

    • @v2ike6udik
      @v2ike6udik Před měsícem

      Also, Have you met telepaths? Ponder about it. Bloody among us. Not good ppl. Decievers.

    • @v2ike6udik
      @v2ike6udik Před měsícem

      Also, if i tell more secific details, YT Comment Digilord will come, *naah, sorry, Dave, you are not allowed to tell ppl the truth". After i went through i started discovering how many things in math and phys are suppressed. And it is massive. Science/math is often pure l.i.e. They are afraid of geometric solutions/explanations, as "they" (evilones) would loose advantage.

  • @ensignbodybag
    @ensignbodybag Před rokem +1143

    I am not a physics nerd, but I found this video fascinating, even though I didn't understand all of the terminology. Well done !

    • @jayden2u
      @jayden2u Před rokem +25

      I've been on youtube since it began and THIS is one of the most kindest, honest and genuine comments I've seen to this very date !!
      He didn't have to say anything at did he?
      I wish my mentality was like this.

    • @celinamilian
      @celinamilian Před rokem

      This statement is dumb to the core, are you a bot? How can you say well done about things you don't understand? 🙄 What if they are talking about killing you secretly.

    • @bouxman2989
      @bouxman2989 Před rokem +6

      It’s pretty much people trying to open a teleporter, and you can’t just send humans into a black hole without making sure. So this whole thing was just people testing if it was possible with the best computer in the world.

    • @dirhi
      @dirhi Před rokem +2

      same

    • @wbass243
      @wbass243 Před rokem +6

      When they get to the point of opening up "the back rooms" , "the mist" creatures coming through a portal, " or The upside down world from "stranger things"... I hope that i realize im just the thoughts of some alien living in a matrix being pumped full of LSD through my Elon Musk Neuralink powered by Googles quantum computer array so i can Be the hero of my full dive "meta" game where i can name my avatar Kirito and open up the world seed advancing human evolution to the digital realm!

  • @Happilynumb
    @Happilynumb Před rokem +1048

    They might actually win the Nobel Prize for Physics! Well done!

    • @MattBenn367
      @MattBenn367 Před rokem +134

      They have to. This is the biggest thing to come out of physics in a decade.. and we've had one hell of a decade.

    • @Zahlenteufel1
      @Zahlenteufel1 Před rokem +153

      @@MattBenn367 the importance of the finding is vastly overstated in the video. There were no wormholes. It is a good step but not a breakthrough.

    • @nicolasfredesfranco9047
      @nicolasfredesfranco9047 Před rokem +26

      @@Zahlenteufel1 what would be the difference between 2 things with exactly the same theoretical and empirical behavior? if they are a duality, science can't tell which one is "really" going on, whatever that means

    • @ecthroi
      @ecthroi Před rokem +21

      they most definitely won't with this

    • @elias_xp95
      @elias_xp95 Před rokem +40

      @@nicolasfredesfranco9047 "...Nobel Prizes can't be awarded to deceased individuals; the Nobel Committee doesn't award Prizes for theoretical work before its predictions are experimentally confirmed; and theoretical physics is churning out ideas that can't be directly tested with today's technology and resources."

  • @thentropist4707
    @thentropist4707 Před rokem +12

    beautifully made video. Incredible that they even succeeding in making something of such complexity.

  • @bjrnlsriedelriedel7500
    @bjrnlsriedelriedel7500 Před rokem +4

    Have seen it everywhere when it happened but did not undertand it that well. The video explained it pretty well. And I have a lot to read and study about it. What a time to be alive at.

  • @spiritabsolute3026
    @spiritabsolute3026 Před rokem +546

    This might be one of the breakthrough's in quantum physics giving us the first glimpse of unifying generalized form of relativity to Quantum gravity. I am so happy seeing the enthusiasm you guys have.
    Getting such an outstanding result it really made everyone happy.

    • @jamesthompson3576
      @jamesthompson3576 Před rokem +1

      Absolutely

    • @dontfollowthinkforyourself
      @dontfollowthinkforyourself Před rokem +2

      are you suggesting that with this we can get a theory of everything ? and is consciousness included in this theory.

    • @trollbiene8410
      @trollbiene8410 Před rokem +11

      @@dontfollowthinkforyourself well, it's a "quantum leap" to a generalized theory of everything. As the physicists in the video already said, this was the first time that gravitational effects were measured on a quantum level. That's hella insane.
      And hmmm.. difficult question.. you see, conciousness is kind of a thing for itself.. We still don't really know how conciousness is connected to physics or any quantum effects or that sorta stuff.. Sooo.. I guess we'll see, but a theory of everything would definitely help us understand such things better.

    • @JohnJohn-td2mj
      @JohnJohn-td2mj Před rokem +1

      Are we forgeting the real down side to all these discoveries?

    • @jadendosanjh297
      @jadendosanjh297 Před rokem

      @@JohnJohn-td2mj what’s that

  • @rahulsakariya3564
    @rahulsakariya3564 Před rokem +443

    Really appreciate the way you explain such a complex topic through the video. Such information motivates youngsters like me to take an interest in quantum computing.

    • @aelolul
      @aelolul Před rokem +7

      Agreed. Too bad they exaggerated their claims to the point of lying.

    • @kathleenmann7311
      @kathleenmann7311 Před rokem +2

      Even 70yr old kids 😉😁

    • @hsvmobileac
      @hsvmobileac Před rokem +4

      They have not explained anything. This mental masturbation has nothing to do with reality.

    • @csciabar
      @csciabar Před rokem +3

      They didn’t really explain anything imo.

  • @danieladeyinka3829
    @danieladeyinka3829 Před rokem +2

    That last line blew my mind, "And most exciting are the questions that we can't yet pose!"....WOW!

  • @MagusArtStudios
    @MagusArtStudios Před 7 měsíci +4

    this was such an amazing video! The suspense, the outcome, everything was beautifully executed. That younger man writing on the white board is brilliant! I feel others will recreate the steps in this experiment, such as simplifying equations with the neural networks for implementation of progressively more complex interactions in quantum computers, like shielding the particles going through the wormhole with quantum gravity.

    • @gravity00x
      @gravity00x Před 6 měsíci

      except its all fake and u didnt understand anything because all of it was made up. so there wasnt even anything to understand really. well done on looking like a complete b4444 f000000000000n

  • @phillyblunt138
    @phillyblunt138 Před rokem +328

    The production level of your videos is off the charts. Bravo folks 👏

    • @jowofoto
      @jowofoto Před rokem +2

      Came to comment the same. Good camera work and artwork, audio and edit. 👌

    • @marukuyama8266
      @marukuyama8266 Před rokem +3

      I know right? The editor needs some praise here. Just look at the seamless hand gesture transitions from 9:38 ~ 9:47 that’s the real spooky action at a distance

    • @JohnJohn-td2mj
      @JohnJohn-td2mj Před rokem

      sarcasim? 🤔

    • @Dnyanesh1
      @Dnyanesh1 Před rokem

      @@marukuyama8266 ohh i didn't noticed that but really great! Appreciate you

  • @harakiri4350
    @harakiri4350 Před rokem +508

    I am so proud of that science is making these huge steps forward.

    • @infiniteuniverse123
      @infiniteuniverse123 Před rokem +2

      This isn't even close to being a "step". This is scientists having fun with computers because they can't figure anything else out. There is no such thing as wormholes. They are something you get when you use a theory that "creates" the universe. The theory they are using in the computer is an utter nightmare. Why else do you think fusion has been created for decades and never shown any sign at all it will produce energy? It's all because of the worst scientific theory in science history.

    • @MyFirstHandle
      @MyFirstHandle Před rokem +1

      Uh oh, we can time travel now?

    • @m.a.farrokhzad1962
      @m.a.farrokhzad1962 Před rokem +17

      The next question is if our brains are quantum machines, can we assume our process of thinking is nothing but a network of entanglement and wormholes defying space-time order to travel to past and the future?.

    • @dallassegno
      @dallassegno Před rokem +2

      toward what?

    • @danisob3633
      @danisob3633 Před rokem +5

      @@dallassegno towards more knowledge

  • @jr.jackrabbit10
    @jr.jackrabbit10 Před rokem +5

    I feel so lucky to be young at this time in history. I was born into an age of rapid scientific discovery the likes of which had never been seen before, and it seems that rate of discovery is not going to be slowing down any time soon.

  • @turtleheadboys5263
    @turtleheadboys5263 Před rokem +8

    Keep on opening the doors and pushing the limits, y'all are doing an awesome job! I'm sure E.P.R. would all be super proud of y'alls accomplishments.

  • @leostir4041
    @leostir4041 Před rokem +18

    Einstein said a lot of things. But my favorite -concerning entanglement - is "I like to believe the moon is still there even if I'm not looking at it."

    • @ricomajestic
      @ricomajestic Před 10 dny

      That quote wasn't really a statement about entanglement but about any quantum wavefunction and its interpretation.

  • @theoglenn
    @theoglenn Před rokem +184

    I’m an undergraduate in college, majoring in “CS & Physics”, and it is my dream to go into Quantum Computing and AI. This video is very motivational and I have an even stronger desire to get there and contribute discoveries to all the mysteries still out there.

    • @christinewaddell
      @christinewaddell Před rokem +8

      🙏❤️ I hope you have a wonderful adventure with many exciting discoveries!

    • @heinzhuberti3583
      @heinzhuberti3583 Před rokem +3

      I am working towards a master degree in quantum physics at a university in Germany. At the moment I should be doing a problem sheet on quantum information theory and I procrastinated by watching this video. :D
      I agree that this video is really well made and it is highly encouraging for people like us to work harder and keep doing what we are doing, but it should also be mentioned that even a grand unified theory will not necessarily bring the warp drive or other magical technologies.
      I am saying the producers are hyping up the actual physics to appeal to a wider audience.
      Still cool though, don’t get me wrong.

    • @heinzhuberti3583
      @heinzhuberti3583 Před rokem +10

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ Also, what is so unholy about doing fundamental physics? One of my colleagues is a devout Christian…

    • @theParticleGod
      @theParticleGod Před rokem +10

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ please point to the verse in scripture that says that studying quantum gravity is forbidden.
      Perhaps it's you who needs to repent, by actually reading the scripture, you'll find it has nothing to say about science.
      If there is a god he must be ashamed and angry about people like you, who follow none of his teachings, but throw interpretations of them in others faces all the time.
      Judge not lest ye be judged.

    • @SpencerTwiddy
      @SpencerTwiddy Před rokem +2

      @@theParticleGod guys he didn't say anything about the video, and the quote isn't talking about the video. This is probably just something he pastes in every comment section

  • @tommymerelte4399
    @tommymerelte4399 Před rokem +6

    Incredible video, excellent editing and extremely inspiring.

  • @amos083
    @amos083 Před rokem +3

    If I get it correctly, the Hollywood image is wrong: To go through a wormhole, a spaceship will have to be disintegrated on one side and reassembled on the other; inside the wormhole, its presence would be felt only as a phase change of some field wave (assuming that observing this wouldn't totally collapse the wormhole).

  • @nyk7979
    @nyk7979 Před rokem +97

    This reminds me of the time I made a perfect circle mirroring sin wave patterns on my tI-83 in high school. I was very proud of myself.

    • @r3dhand_
      @r3dhand_ Před rokem +6

      Underated comment

    • @Guitarisforgrins
      @Guitarisforgrins Před rokem +5

      It's pretty much the same thing.

    • @ntal5859
      @ntal5859 Před rokem +10

      No such thing because the curve is infinite ie the smaller the step the more resolution, so there is no perfect circle.

    • @TorutheRedFox
      @TorutheRedFox Před rokem +5

      I mean (cos(t), sin(t)) where t is the degree of the point on the circle will give you a circle

    • @soupy5890
      @soupy5890 Před rokem

      Do you mean you approximated a circle with sine wave patterns or something else?

  • @Ripen3
    @Ripen3 Před rokem +155

    Very interesting video. I would love to see a followup video going in-depth of explaining how it works, that helps the viewer make a conclusion. There is no limit to what you can teach people on CZcams!

    • @westownsend8228
      @westownsend8228 Před rokem +48

      Agreed. It was way too hand wavy regarding what actually happened. I get these subjects arent really simple to explain, but as Mr Einstein would say, if you can't explain it simply you don't understand it well enough.

    • @Ripen3
      @Ripen3 Před rokem +1

      @@westownsend8228 Einstein said it well!

    • @lutestringuk
      @lutestringuk Před rokem

      agreed

    • @anywallsocket
      @anywallsocket Před rokem +26

      They kept saying ‘the wormhole’ like it wasn’t just an equation written in a quantum computer.

    • @mando074
      @mando074 Před rokem +20

      Part of the reason it seems too "hand-wavy" or somewhat magical is because the experiment was conducted to a simplified (basic) 7 terms down from the 210 thereby bringing down the complexity. This made it possible for the current quantum computers to run the experiment and at least say in a fundamental level it is possible for a wormhole to exist. However, hopefully in the future it can be run with all 210 terms (adding complexity) to create a more solid "model" of how this could work in reality. A more solid model will make this seem less "magical".

  • @calummacgregor589
    @calummacgregor589 Před rokem +14

    I love how my experience in STEM helps give an idea of how all this works. How I have a rough idea of how all these parts work/come together, but I still understand so little.

  • @chimkinnugget7134
    @chimkinnugget7134 Před rokem +1

    This is amazing work, and so recent! I’m excited to see what will come of this

  • @snakex555
    @snakex555 Před rokem +198

    I have no idea how any of this works but it seems really cool, and I'm so happy that there are people that do know and put their effort towards it.

    • @bullshitvendor
      @bullshitvendor Před rokem +2

      mmh, I dont know about that. The applications for "bending reality" in such a fundamental way, considering humanitys history, is really rather unnerving.

    • @bullshitvendor
      @bullshitvendor Před rokem +3

      @@dad1844 babysteps ...

    • @rafaelgonzalez4175
      @rafaelgonzalez4175 Před rokem +2

      They don't know didly squat. Many scientists won't even admit time is no longer relevant. And were wrong about it all along. They won't even admit the speed of light is also wrong. But hey We humans are more proud than we are forthcoming.

    • @rafaelgonzalez4175
      @rafaelgonzalez4175 Před rokem

      @@dad1844 That is because the bridge was not configured for varying mass. No telling how much weight there actually is in space. I may be 150lbs but in space that 150lbs has no torque. When I step down it is as if I am still. I can move my muscles but it has no resistance. What is my mass oppose to my weight now.

    • @tonyzuco6144
      @tonyzuco6144 Před rokem

      *"I have no idea how any of this works..."*
      That's because it doesn't. Quantum Mechanics is a farce.

  • @something8013
    @something8013 Před rokem +34

    This video is so good edited and does an amazing job explaining all these concepts. Good job!!

  • @voltflake
    @voltflake Před rokem

    Yes, great video that works fine with my ultrawide monitor. Thanks for uploading in original aspect ratio without adding black bars!

  • @roldanduarteholguin7102
    @roldanduarteholguin7102 Před 9 měsíci +1

    On 19-Apr-2000 I invented the Delta Vehicle that uses all known Deltas: Pressure, Voltage, Magnetism, Density, Temperature, Height, Gravity. The most important Delta of my Vehicle is the Gravitational Delta. To take advantage of the Gravitational Delta, the vehicle has three devices: 1. Gravitational Wave Tuner 2. Gravitational Wave Amplifier 3. Gravitational Wave Directioner

  • @illuminatelair8084
    @illuminatelair8084 Před rokem +37

    would've liked for them to explain how/where the negative energy pulse came from?

    • @frun
      @frun Před rokem

      Think of it in terms of regular positive energy. It just has a negative sign, but otherwise nothing special. Energy happens to flow from place to place.

    • @nonyobiz-records
      @nonyobiz-records Před rokem +11

      from the article : "Rotating all the particles’ spin directions translates, in the dual space-time picture, into a negative-energy shock wave that sweeps through the wormhole, kicking the qubit forward and, at a predictable time, out of the mouth." ... its a great read and much more grounded than the video

    • @crazyspace6792
      @crazyspace6792 Před rokem +4

      @@frun no....

    • @TasX
      @TasX Před rokem +2

      @@nonyobiz-recordsthat’s only if you assume the holographic principle. There hasn’t been any proof or demonstration that this principle is true
      Here’s another quote from the journal “because nine qubits can be easily simulated on a classical computer, the results of this experiment cannot teach us anything that could not be learnt from a classical computation, and will not teach us anything new about quantum gravity.”

  • @Gieling
    @Gieling Před rokem +3

    Thanks to the team for creating this fascinating documentary.

  • @ryanadams0922
    @ryanadams0922 Před rokem

    I like how you explained it as best you cant bare bones in the beginning that is what is needed for understanding. Good Job and I enjoyed the video

  • @SonOfMeme
    @SonOfMeme Před rokem +7

    "Let’s start with the title. No, scientists haven’t created a wormhole using a quantum computer. They haven’t even simulated one. They simulated some aspects of wormhole dynamics under the crucial assumption that the holographic correspondence of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model holds. Without this assumption they just have a bunch of qubits being entangled, no relation to wormholes.
    The article just takes this assumption for granted, and cavalierly goes on to say nonsense like “by manipulating the qubits, the physicists then sent information through the wormhole”. Shortly afterwards, though, it claims that “the experiment can be seen as evidence for the holographic principle”. But didn’t you just assume it was true? And how on Earth can this test the holographic principle? It’s not as if we can do experiments with actual wormholes in order to check if their dynamics match the holographic description.
    The deeper problem, though, is that the article never mentions that this simulation can easily be done in a classical computer. Much better, in fact, than in a quantum computer. The scientific content of the paper is not about creating wormholes or investigating the holographic principle, but about getting the quantum computer to work.
    As bizarre and over-the-top the article is, it is downright sober compared to the cringeworthy video they released. While the article correctly points out that one needs negative energy to make a wormhole traversable, and that negative energy does not exist, and that the experiment merely simulated a negative energy pulse, the video has no such qualms. It directly stated that the experiment created a negative energy shockwave and used it to transmit qubits through the wormhole.
    For me the worst part of the video was at 11:53, where they showed a graph with a bright point labelled “negative energy peak” on it. The problem is that this is not a plot of data, it’s just a drawing, with no connection to the experiment. Lay people will think they are seeing actual data, so this is straightforward disinformation."

    • @nebulisnoobis102
      @nebulisnoobis102 Před rokem +1

      Why do people put quotation marks around entire comments?

    • @SonOfMeme
      @SonOfMeme Před rokem

      @@nebulisnoobis102 "Because the whole comment is a quote"

    • @Anon-xd3cf
      @Anon-xd3cf Před rokem

      I am glad someone in this comments section actually gets it.
      It is group think propping up more group think.
      Assumptions based on previous untested unproven assumptions.

    • @nebulisnoobis102
      @nebulisnoobis102 Před rokem

      @@SonOfMeme you’re quoting the comment you are writing as the quote, and is thus a normal comment. It wasn’t written before, and there’s no reason to quote something if it only exists as a quote.
      Who are you quoting, by the way?

    • @SonOfMeme
      @SonOfMeme Před rokem

      @@nebulisnoobis102
      >It wasn't written before
      "Are you sure about that"?

  • @fjelltun92
    @fjelltun92 Před rokem +230

    This is truly astonishing, this way of using a quantum computer may just turn out to be as big of a discovery as the internet itself was. Or bigger. And I loved the way it was made so understandable in this video. Amazing work.

    • @Baerchenization
      @Baerchenization Před rokem +13

      The internet was not discovered.

    • @crawlmanjrable
      @crawlmanjrable Před rokem +4

      @@dad1844 just provide proof no one will believe you otherwise

    • @epajarjestys9981
      @epajarjestys9981 Před rokem +4

      Lol, the internet was a discovery. It always existed in nature, and we just needed to connect to it. Of course.

    • @blackdereker4023
      @blackdereker4023 Před rokem +16

      @@Baerchenization Don't be obtuse on purpose, you know what he meant.

    • @crawlmanjrable
      @crawlmanjrable Před rokem

      @@dad1844 fraud

  • @snakecharmer9072
    @snakecharmer9072 Před rokem +66

    I know we are likely far from any sort of practical application, but its fun to imagine the possibilities of this phenomenon. If we could make wormholes like the one in this experiment in a predictable and continues way they may very well be the key to making more advanced quantum computers

    • @Dennzer1
      @Dennzer1 Před rokem

      so amazing

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 Před rokem +11

      Unfortunately the headline is misleading. They just simulated one on a quantum computer, and got the same results as when they simulated a worm hole on a regular computer. It didn’t do anything new or interesting.

    • @kavi5990
      @kavi5990 Před rokem +3

      @@tvre0 so are u saying that people calling this to be noble prize stuffs are just exaggerating
      (I don't have too much knowledge except for what they are)

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 Před rokem +4

      @@kavi5990 well, most have been misled by the video. The video is intended to trick and deceive you, saying that we made a real wormhole. That is wrong, and was a publicity stunt. They did nothing new.

    • @kavi5990
      @kavi5990 Před rokem

      @@tvre0 👍

  • @SatwikPadhi
    @SatwikPadhi Před rokem +49

    These videos aren't just informative, they're inspirational and fun as well.
    Keep up the good work Quanta.

  • @FPJourney
    @FPJourney Před rokem +39

    Wow, this video really sparked my imagination! This has potential to definitely be a game-changer and could revolutionize the way we explore the universe. I'm excited to see where this technology could take us in the future. Keep up the great work!

    • @bithibegum3251
      @bithibegum3251 Před rokem +2

      @@dad1844 pls

    • @MrCubFan415
      @MrCubFan415 Před rokem

      @@dad1844 Theoretically, it wouldn’t prohibit FTL (or perhaps I should say Shorter-than-Normal-Distance) communication, though, would it?

  • @rolandbole5824
    @rolandbole5824 Před rokem

    Great piece of scientific experiment and what it could lead to. You start off with some vague ideas and a ton of questions and often not knowing where you will land.

  • @bentheuberdestroyer
    @bentheuberdestroyer Před rokem +2

    This is a foray into the ability to travel not just time but space. Allowing us to move forward backward and to any distance across our universe. When perfected. With the precise coordinates you could find yourself in any number of places. I hope those who find themselves in possession of this technology will use it responsibly while they travel the limits.

  • @Raziel1818
    @Raziel1818 Před rokem +19

    Awe struck. Amazing experiment, amazing video, amazing production, everything. Congrats to everyone involved!

  • @TheDerHeld
    @TheDerHeld Před rokem +14

    Wow, beautifully done. The Interviews, the cut and the graphics are phenomenal. Thank you very much

  • @pb9405
    @pb9405 Před rokem +12

    For the people who are still somewhat confused, they did not create a wormhole, they made a simulation of a wormhole theory on a quantum computer.

    • @Agnostic_Mind
      @Agnostic_Mind Před 3 měsíci

      That oddly make me believe we actually living in a simulation

  • @coma-body-stilllife
    @coma-body-stilllife Před rokem +2

    The cut at 9:38 linking their gestures is so satisfying.. .. ..

  • @vaultboy2270
    @vaultboy2270 Před rokem +104

    I never thought as a little kid i would get to be in this era of technology. Fantastic video

    • @gunzmith29r
      @gunzmith29r Před rokem +4

      its self delusion..not technology.

    • @wardvereecken9701
      @wardvereecken9701 Před rokem +10

      @@gunzmith29r wdym?

    • @SnowWow
      @SnowWow Před rokem +6

      @@wardvereecken9701 Don't mind him, he's just someone who worships a book, and i'm not saying its wrong but he shouldn't call other people delusionals

    • @alexsmith6914
      @alexsmith6914 Před rokem +1

      @@gunzmith29rThank you! Couldn’t say it any better myself!

    • @aaronjoshdelacruz9856
      @aaronjoshdelacruz9856 Před rokem

      @@alexsmith6914 it was fun to descover somethin u know,
      life is on process anyways

  • @jayplug3199
    @jayplug3199 Před rokem +107

    When real professionals do a documentary, just by how long enough the written statements were lasting captivatingly on screen you can tell how well these “video production” scientists know what they do.

    • @amihere383
      @amihere383 Před rokem +11

      Yeah, there's a whole lot of stuff here that was left unexplained and kind of just swept under the rug. not super impressed.

    • @amro.1701
      @amro.1701 Před rokem +9

      @@amihere383 I think they were trying to simplify it for the general public to understand because the concepts they talk about are extremely difficult to understand and explain in a 17 min video. They did an amazing job simplifying the information for everybody.

    • @amihere383
      @amihere383 Před rokem +4

      @@amro.1701 They simplified by not actually explaining what it was?

    • @datstift610
      @datstift610 Před rokem +1

      Skill issue.

    • @Luke-ih1oc
      @Luke-ih1oc Před rokem +3

      @SavageBear They said quite a bit; I think perhaps your ability to understand it is under par.

  • @BosleyBeats
    @BosleyBeats Před rokem +2

    Observation/Question: now that we have a worm hole, does this mean we now have the fundamental code to do advanced quantum debugging?
    The first thing that came to mind as I watched this video was we now can do a peek operation at the qbit state. So we can attach a watcher to a quantum variable and observe the superposition state while the qbit is shredded in the tunnel, essentially being able to run entangled experiments

    • @tristanmisja
      @tristanmisja Před rokem

      No, because that would break superposition.

  • @figjamtanj8520
    @figjamtanj8520 Před rokem +2

    12.50
    I loved the presentation of this video, but my question is this.
    During the transference of the Qbit from one side of the the worm hole to the other side of the worm hole are the states exactly identical and if so how is that information preserved through the disassembly and reassembly of that information?
    Does this mean that there are sub quantum fields that act as place markers to preserve the information through the disassembly and reassembly phase?
    Or does the information remain whole and it is the wormhole that is forced to dilate to allow the information to maintain its identical identity through the transfer between the entrance and the exit points of the wormhole?
    And lastly, if the qbit is broken down further to allow for transference between the entrance and exit points can at any point/time/state be altered then recombined into another qbit which looks/behaves exactly the same as the original qbit but be different?
    I am showing my ignorance, but it would be like taking an exact copy of a clone but not being able to tell how much of the (wrong analogy, I'm sure) individuality would be kept identically intact? And how would it be tested for? Can there be an actual identical clone at any time during journey which would not destroy the original information or the destination information?
    Thank you for allowing me to be an armchair physicist. 😊

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 Před rokem

      All of your questions still apply even if it was a simulation, but it should be known they didn’t actually create a wormhole. They simulated one, and pointlessly at that, since a classical computer could do it just the same.

  • @trollbiene8410
    @trollbiene8410 Před rokem +116

    This brought me close to tears. Literally. I'm so happy to live in such a crazy age, where we begin to sound out the very core of nature, in a universe so weird and unpredictable like ours.
    I'm so excited to see what the future will have in store for us.

    • @papiridolo9263
      @papiridolo9263 Před rokem +7

      Its a big machine based on a big sound bubble....

    • @zach4832
      @zach4832 Před rokem

      @@papiridolo9263 it’s funny people like you have been undermining science for thousands of years, yet you were able to leave this ignorant comment thanks to scientists.

    • @replexity
      @replexity Před rokem +8

      nerd

    • @christophergenther3517
      @christophergenther3517 Před rokem +4

      it's going to be a hellscape

    • @papiridolo9263
      @papiridolo9263 Před rokem

      @@zach4832 I DONT THINK ITS FUNNY AT ALL.

  • @cybergothika6906
    @cybergothika6906 Před rokem +11

    Impressive, fantastic, I'm speechless. Congratulations also for the channel to keep things serious and straight to the point, but still attractive for people outside the knowledge yet. Great work, keep it up.

  • @elizabethrogge7908
    @elizabethrogge7908 Před rokem +1

    When did this take place? Can you make another video to explain what happened to the information in the wormhole?

  • @bluegg996
    @bluegg996 Před rokem +8

    6:27 I love her so much, embodies every experimental physicist that has been ridiculed for the whole degree. It’s also amazing how there are experimentalists that both know GR and QFT, we at condensed matter just study the basics of QFT and that’s all

  • @pog9238
    @pog9238 Před rokem +4

    Whoever made the visuals, YOU ARE THE BEST VISUALS ARTIST EVER!!! THESE ARE THE BEST IVE EVER SEEN AND THANK YOU SO MUCH YOU BLESSED MY EYES!!

  • @hercules71185
    @hercules71185 Před rokem +13

    I really hope your other videos are close to as well done as this. I'm going on a binge this week. This was incredibly well done. Great research and I am absolutely ecstatic about the new research. I can't wait for this to cross into consciousness. I wish I could get into this field myself.

  • @calinionut-alin2154
    @calinionut-alin2154 Před 9 měsíci

    I saw this video 5 times, i am very proud about all human that work at this along the history and i like to Say tks and i am greatful 🤗tks guys for all Your outstanding work, even the experiment fail I would still be proud

  • @codywolfe556
    @codywolfe556 Před rokem +39

    I’ve been working on my own hypothesis and this helped me make a huge breakthrough! When I was a kid I learned about general relativity and black holes. Once I learned about time dilation specifically it was over for me as far as obsessions go. 15 years later and here I am working on my own hypothesis where the questions I asked and answers I thought up were confirmed over the years as I learned and read more. I thought to myself once that black holes would pretty much halt the flow of time, and I learned not long after that I was right, one of the proudest moments I’ve ever had! I’ve always had a good intuition for these sort of ideas and thoughts. I wanna be clear I’m not trying to claim to be super smart or anything this is pretty much all I’m good at 😅

    • @akaMyThought
      @akaMyThought Před rokem

      Awesome my mind does the same thing in a way.

    • @leoterss
      @leoterss Před rokem +5

      @Jay R yeah ok buddy sure, can do this in C# lmaooo

    • @justineseman3741
      @justineseman3741 Před rokem

      Could the 4 Binaries of Quantom Computing represent the 4dimensions?

    • @darkprose
      @darkprose Před rokem +2

      Is this a joke or are _you_ the joke? Because it’s one or the other.

    • @elizabethstranger3122
      @elizabethstranger3122 Před rokem

      That's really awesome! Keep on following your intuition, wherever it leads you! Black holes, relativity, quantum mechanics, all of these ideas just keep blowing my mind! Have you ever read the book 'Eureka' by Edgar Allan Poe? That book is fascinating! It really inspired me to keep on speculating about the nature of the universe. That book was written in the early 19th century, and in it he proposes that the universe began from 'a primodial atom', as he called it, and that it not only had a beginning, but an end as well.

  • @djpanncake
    @djpanncake Před rokem +25

    I so incredibly much want Einstein to come back to life and see what happened since his discoveries, what we are now able to do, calculate and simulate with computers...it honestly is more than mindblowing

    • @golbez3794
      @golbez3794 Před rokem

      einstein must be spinning in his grave...

    • @MorvusMonvrus
      @MorvusMonvrus Před rokem +8

      @@golbez3794 He's simultaneously spinning and not, and doesn't actualize as either until you dig him up for observation.

    • @DoctorTimelord
      @DoctorTimelord Před rokem +4

      @@MorvusMonvrus schrodingers einstein?

    • @Channel-xy2wj
      @Channel-xy2wj Před rokem

      maybe he's aware

    • @willahelmpowers4835
      @willahelmpowers4835 Před rokem +2

      @@golbez3794 idk about spinning, but he likely experienced many worm holes there years ago. ba-dum-ch

  • @ToriKo_
    @ToriKo_ Před rokem +19

    Beautiful visuals guys, tho I’m not sure I really understood the evidence or explanations

    • @akhilsankar
      @akhilsankar Před rokem +4

      In simple they have managed to simulate how a wormhole might work in a quantum computer, it's so astonishing that the results validates our understanding in underlying mathematics, so opens up a new realm of possibilities.
      This new discovery opens a new possibilities that we can simulate other complex theoretical concepts that related to gravity and quantum mechanics which was only limited untill now to abstract mathematical theories.
      Sorry for long sentences..

    • @clown134
      @clown134 Před rokem

      that's because this is fucking bullshit. notice how there's not a single actual picture outside of computer animation?

    • @Zahlenteufel1
      @Zahlenteufel1 Před rokem +5

      @@clown134 that's a bad reason for calling it bullshit, but I agree, it's bullshit.

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Před rokem +7

      @@akhilsankar I think maybe i want to understand how simulating (?) on a Quantum computer (?) a worm hole (?) validates and teaches us about the underlying physics (?), but I’m not sure I have the intellect to keep up, even if it was explained explicitly.
      -> now with some of my questions inserted:
      maybe i want to understand how simulating (what does simulation mean here and why is it analogous enough to the real thing that it counts? If this is a simulation what would the real analogous experiment be?) on a Quantum computer (it seems the implications of doing this on a quantum computer and not a classical computer matter, but how? And why?) a worm hole (so we’re doing this to learn the link between worm holes and QM, but how exactly is a worm hole quantum mechanical again?) validates and teaches us about the underlying physics (so all the above questions tie together to teach me something about the underlying physics, and those lessons would be...?), but I’m not sure I have the intellect to keep up, even if it was explained explicitly.

  • @hugo7506
    @hugo7506 Před rokem

    This is a very good video clip, it is like the gatewway to the beginning of a new frontier of unimaginable size to be explored.

  • @run1492
    @run1492 Před rokem

    This is incredible ! The first youtube video I see in 2023. A very good start. THANKS ! How amazing is reality

  • @embrown23
    @embrown23 Před rokem +10

    Beautiful work!

  • @coryhall561
    @coryhall561 Před rokem +18

    This is very fascinating and exciting!! It’s really exciting to see the gravitational physicist and quantum physicist coming together. It seemed to me that they clearly had to work together, but i wasn’t burdened by all the knowledge of the math. Lol. I really wish i understood more. Physics has always fascinated me, i should have gone to school for it.

    • @bu5415
      @bu5415 Před rokem +1

      @@dad1844 I would love proof if it is no hassle.

    • @coryhall561
      @coryhall561 Před rokem +1

      @Russell pinuela what does this mean?

    • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
      @marshallsweatherhiking1820 Před rokem

      @@dad1844 The idea of sending something macroscopic through a wormhole is science fiction, but these experiments open up a pathway towards being able to test the unified models physicists and mathematicians have been playing around with for the past half century. Its exciting to at least be making progress towards bringing foundational theoretical physics back into the empirical realm.

  • @vlastimil-furst
    @vlastimil-furst Před rokem +1

    It might be a fairly irrelevant information to quantum physics, but Maria Spiropulu is so beautiful. It wasn't said in top 50 comments, and I suppose her effort to stay fit and look good deserves some appreciation even amidst more important things going on :)

  • @trck2bnkz
    @trck2bnkz Před 7 měsíci +1

    it’s interesting that a lot of these “UAPs” resemble cubits

  • @jacobkinnaman8142
    @jacobkinnaman8142 Před rokem +7

    Currently doing my undergrad senior paper on quantum entanglement, and this is just mind blowing. Really exciting news for the future. What a time to be alive!

  • @kyuzo3313
    @kyuzo3313 Před rokem +180

    😁So amazing to be alive to witness this!!! Well done and thanks to the team!

    • @dallassegno
      @dallassegno Před rokem +2

      so happy to see a cute cartoon with a compelling story that proved nothing? bravo

    • @seth9466
      @seth9466 Před rokem +9

      @@dallassegno People like you will always be around to doubt. Because regardless of peoples actions you will always elect to be a hater. Continue on in your small world without the idea that greater things are possible.

    • @thepeasant269
      @thepeasant269 Před rokem

      @@dallassegno pea brain

    • @alucardnolifeking789
      @alucardnolifeking789 Před rokem

      @@seth9466 such people are narrow minded and stubborn and bitter, just wait when they get older, useless oxygen waste.

    • @feral_orc
      @feral_orc Před rokem

      @@dallassegno it's almost like the purpose of simulating this was just to see if it worked or something.. Which it did

  • @GMPranav
    @GMPranav Před rokem +26

    "The are so many questions that one could explore using these ideas but the most exciting are the ones that we can't yet pose".
    Underrated line

  • @archielundy3131
    @archielundy3131 Před rokem +6

    Incredible work and possible tools for further investigation and insight BUT a tad overstated. No actual wormhole or actual negative energy have been created - just a quantum computer simulation.

  • @Tony-hs8mu
    @Tony-hs8mu Před 8 měsíci

    Matter is one state of energy, frequencies is a part of that vary. Manipulate the frequency you create several state.. Frequencies some oppose, some are likely create fields.

  • @HMan2828
    @HMan2828 Před rokem +58

    This is an amazing proof of concept, but remember, they started with over 200 terms to simulate it fully, and an AI told them they could manage with 7. Once the experiment can be repeated with the full terms, then I'll believe they made wormhole. Still amazing physics though!

    • @mindtherapy3753
      @mindtherapy3753 Před rokem +12

      This was my thought too. But it won’t downplay the achievement this is uno. We aren’t even fully there yet with AI and quantum computing, so I’d take this with a grain of salt. Happy we’re thinking better than a century ago with the tools we currently have. The next couple of decades are going to be exciting ones for sure.
      PS: I’m not native English so my sentence structure maybe confusing. Lol. Forgive me

    • @bakedbeings
      @bakedbeings Před rokem +1

      "simulated a wormhole"?

    • @pablopereyra7126
      @pablopereyra7126 Před rokem +16

      @@bakedbeings From what I understood, they made a virtual system that follows the laws of physics and made a wormhole in it. So, if the simulation follows the laws of physics, and it is possible to traverse a wormhole in it, then (supposedly) it would be possible in the real world too.

    • @tiikis757
      @tiikis757 Před rokem

      @@pablopereyra7126 yes exactly. pretty dang cool

    • @PimentelES
      @PimentelES Před rokem

      That was basically fitting for observables

  • @NathanHarrison7
    @NathanHarrison7 Před rokem +9

    Excellent video. It’s absolutely incredible to think about the advancements and discoveries humankind has made in just the last 200 years. Exponential knowledge and discovery on top of exponential discovery and knowledge; each leading to new heights for humanity and new discoveries and knowledge. Exciting indeed! And thank you for making a video about quantum science that a layman like myself can actually understand and appreciate.

  • @mikeg3728
    @mikeg3728 Před 3 měsíci

    Is that you Maria talking in the beginning?
    Fascinating video.

  • @djbusx
    @djbusx Před rokem

    US - Haring @13:05. A great track I used for my otherworldly space playlist on Spotify. Very amused and fitting to see it pop up here many years later on this video.. that I just happened to stumble upon. Maybe it was the entanglement.

  • @nogood237
    @nogood237 Před rokem +4

    Someone who understands better than me please explain, they just simulated the dynamics of a wormhole and didn't great a wormhole (anymore than all the wormholes that are always created) by training a neural network on wormhole dynamics and then framing this as a neural network simulation of a set of properties and behaviors right?!

    • @rpscorp9457
      @rpscorp9457 Před rokem +1

      yep, as far as im able to tell. If this was an actual physical wormhole event, im 100% certain it would have fallen under nation security/UN auspices, and we wouldnt be hearing about it right now on youtube, thats for damn sure.

    • @aelolul
      @aelolul Před rokem +1

      Right. This is just a simplified physics sim run on a special computer. No wormholes involved.

    • @nogood237
      @nogood237 Před rokem +1

      @@aelolul Thank you very much for confirming/clarifying!

  • @DrBrianKeating
    @DrBrianKeating Před rokem +3

    An amazing experiment. Trying to get Maria Spiropulu on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast. Let me know if you want to watch a live conversation with her!

  • @hitbox7422
    @hitbox7422 Před rokem +2

    Its a simulation of a few Wormhole properties applied to a (still simulated) traversing Quantum particle, if anyone in here thought about "artificial wormholes". It's nothing close to a real wormhole, although the implications are huge and very interesting. It shows that there are in fact symmetries between Quantum- and Relativistic mechanics that we can use to derive shared properties both systems have in common. Im rooting for those who endeavour in this quest for knowledge. Only problem i see is google, they got the most powerful quantum system at the moment, but as we speak silicon electric nuclear resonance systems rise to be the most useful tool in this particular field. Since google derives its system from more "traditional" effects, i think its not the best horse to place bets on. Just my 2 cents on this topic.

  • @Ctrl_Alt_Sup
    @Ctrl_Alt_Sup Před rokem

    The Google translation is like a wormhole that allowed me to discover Quanta Magazine !
    Greetings from France

  • @BlahBlahBlah74
    @BlahBlahBlah74 Před rokem +27

    What a fantastically made documentary explaining a complex and mind blowing concept in an engaging manner. Huge respect to the often overlooked animators on this one. I thought the graphics were unique and fascinating, so well done Rui Braz and Kim Taylor!

  • @DavidMcCoul
    @DavidMcCoul Před rokem +23

    Fascinating! I'd love to learn more in depth about this, as the video is awfully vague. So they see a "peak" in the data, with the y-axis as "information"? What does this mean exactly? Second, how is negative energy-- seemingly impossible from a classical physics perspective-- generated and sent through the "wormhole" during the experiment? And most importantly, how is holographic duality provably true? "We look at this set of entangled cubits, and we evolve it in a way that has exactly the same physics as a gravitational wormhole." What does this mean exactly? If they demonstrated EPR with the quantum computer, how does this show EPR = ER?

    • @TasX
      @TasX Před rokem +6

      Buried inside the research paper you’ll find this quote “because nine qubits can be easily simulated on a classical computer, the results of this experiment cannot teach us anything that could not be learnt from a classical computation, and will not teach us anything new about quantum gravity.”

    • @DavidMcCoul
      @DavidMcCoul Před rokem +5

      @@TasX Interesting, thanks! Although that doesn't mean they weren't able to empirically demonstrate a wormhole with their quantum computer. I'm just still unclear about the holographic duality, the key assumption for their experimental design. I should check out the paper myself

    • @TasX
      @TasX Před rokem +12

      @@DavidMcCoul For more context about what I said, a lot of the scientific community has been criticizing them because they hyped up something really normal. They didn't demonstrate a wormhole or anything.
      What they did was get a previous theory that possibly (and right now loosely) relates wormhole theory to quantum entanglement. Then they said "a quantum computer can quantum entangle" then did that on a quantum computer and called it a wormhole.
      It's like trying to fly by pulling on your shoelace. The only novel thing about this research was that they used machine learning to cut down the number of parameters needed for the wormhole simulation to work on the quantum computer.
      Notice I said simulation too. That's basically what it is. The wormhole has also been simulated on a classical computer before. And quantum computers have been used for more complex tasks before. So they didn't discover anything novel.

    • @davehart9972
      @davehart9972 Před rokem

      its means give them more $$$ so they can dazzle the masses with BS

  • @ClariceAust
    @ClariceAust Před rokem +21

    This universe is astounding. Congrats to the physicists in being able to open up to the rest of us, just how amazing it really is.

  • @studentoflife9313
    @studentoflife9313 Před rokem

    I got chills watching the video, well done!

  • @vaibhavdubey3647
    @vaibhavdubey3647 Před rokem +78

    This is gonna be the best discovery in the 21st century in my opinion

    • @MaximQuantum
      @MaximQuantum Před rokem +15

      This decade is only a fifth by, who knows what we're gonna discover in 80 years.

    • @stephenr80
      @stephenr80 Před rokem +8

      This is Nobel material if verified

    • @TheSasqwerty
      @TheSasqwerty Před rokem +1

      What about the time Crystal also discovered on Googles quantum computer

    • @YosiChen
      @YosiChen Před rokem +6

      I would say it’s a very nice demonstration of high quality of Google’s superconducting processors. However, it doesn’t give much new unexpected physics. It is more like a benchmark that the current device can handle such sophisticated experiment. Fault-tolerant universal quantum computers will definitely win the Nobel prize, and we still have a long way to go.

    • @dingdongsolong5655
      @dingdongsolong5655 Před rokem +1

      Why?

  • @ThePaulv12
    @ThePaulv12 Před rokem +42

    I didn't think quantum computers were a thing yet but there you go they are and they're so mature they can simulate wormholes!

    • @Wildboy789789
      @Wildboy789789 Před rokem +7

      turns out quantum theory was in the 30s, i recently learnd the theory for quantum computers was in the early 70s, and theyve been working on them since the mid 90s... people dont realize these things are about 6 years away from being inside your PC at home, instead of 1s and0s yes's and no's, a quantum PC basically has good guessing built in and thinks more like a person

    • @meows8603
      @meows8603 Před rokem +18

      @@Wildboy789789 quantum computers still use 1s and 0s, it's just that the qubits are in a state of 1 and 0 at the same time. I.e., they're in a state of superposition until a measurement collapses it into a definitive state. Also they're entangled, so measuring the result of one of the qubits will tell the state of its pair, regardless of distance. Both properties allows quantum computers to work exponentially faster on some problems, as you said.

    • @ziko317
      @ziko317 Před rokem +20

      @@Wildboy789789 6 yrs away huh? A'ight. 🤡

    • @ThePaulv12
      @ThePaulv12 Před rokem +1

      @@ziko317 LOL

    • @matthewlillistone5943
      @matthewlillistone5943 Před rokem +4

      @@Wildboy789789 dream on

  • @Goldslate73
    @Goldslate73 Před 5 měsíci +1

    "its still baby enough to fit in the crib."
    That HAS to go in the paper.

  • @basswhispers1720
    @basswhispers1720 Před rokem

    if both entry and exit points are black holes is there then not a inward gravitational pull from both sides that end up keeping the object send through stuck in the mid in theory ? or is the exit a reverse black hole ?

  • @deutschluz
    @deutschluz Před rokem +10

    Does anybody have a source on how they generated negative energy to "charge" the wormhole? That seemed important but was not talked about.

    • @theyuragoon3226
      @theyuragoon3226 Před rokem

      I don't but they said they made a space in the quantum computer and that space is the worm hole. I assume that the negative energy is a unspecified value of the quantum nature of the system that goes to the worm hole. Kind of like when there's a whirl pool on top of a body of water due to a salt mine under the earth being flooded once the space between the rock and the water is removed and gravity has pulled the first drops of water into the cavity. In that example gravity is being used to represent negative energy and is just a feature of the system like NE is to Quantum systems.

    • @TasX
      @TasX Před rokem +7

      They didn’t. They didn’t make a wormhole like what the video makes it seem. They’re only using a loose theory that might connect quantum entanglement to wormholes and basically said “oh since quantum computers can do quantum entanglement, we can probably run a wormhole simulation by using a quantum computer.” There’s no verification or real life wormhole made.

    • @deutschluz
      @deutschluz Před rokem +2

      @@TasX Sigh! the more I learn about the less I am impressed by the reporting.

    • @TasX
      @TasX Před rokem +2

      @@deutschluz Yeah most of the scientific community is criticizing the way they hyped this up. This kind of hype should be saved for real discoveries like the Higgs Boson, or else it will make them look bad.

  • @musicsansnotes
    @musicsansnotes Před rokem +25

    I find physics fascinating and I'm so glad this appeared on my feed. I enjoyed this entirely too much. I believe I learned a little bit of what physicists do on a daily basis. I wouldn't be able to pass a Physics class if my life depended on it 🙃 😅 🙂

    • @coryhall561
      @coryhall561 Před rokem

      I’m in the same boat. Lol…. It really is incredible though!!!

  • @EddieEdProductions
    @EddieEdProductions Před rokem

    Great and very informative video. Thank you for sharing and teaching us. God bless you all

  • @pradeepkumar-lz9cf
    @pradeepkumar-lz9cf Před rokem +5

    When i was very young I used to wonder why cant quantum physics have proof like chemistry but after watching this video I feel very happy that in no time warm hole will help us not only understand gravity but i do see possibilities of time travel. Future looks exciting ! kudos to google and research team for amazing break through.

  • @mdl222
    @mdl222 Před rokem +6

    Much gratitude to those pushing the limits of our understanding AND sharing it with the rest of us!! 👍🙏✌

    • @sciencelover9490
      @sciencelover9490 Před rokem

      Really amazing, but what will this discovery offer? Will we be able to travel through time through this wormhole?

  • @tuckerlivingston
    @tuckerlivingston Před rokem +89

    seriously unbeleivable. i can't wait to see how this develops

    • @Zahlenteufel1
      @Zahlenteufel1 Před rokem +12

      it's unbelievable because it's clickbait that misrepresents the science

    • @ecthroi
      @ecthroi Před rokem +7

      literally unbelievable, yeah. sad to see from Quanta presenting some interesting science in this way.

    • @MyFirstHandle
      @MyFirstHandle Před rokem +1

      Does this mean we can time travel? We can teleport to the edge of the universe? Or meet another version of ourselves? No need for hyperloop?

    • @computerconcepts3352
      @computerconcepts3352 Před rokem

      69th like

  • @Sintrania
    @Sintrania Před rokem +1

    I could imagine future where we build a device that can send data faster than the speed of light via quantum entanglement, but if ER=EPR is real there is also possibility we might be really be teleporting stuff across as well.

    • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
      @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Před rokem +1

      Einstein is the greatest mind of all time.
      Think about this: he wrote two papers in 1935 that took almost 100 years for physicists to properly understand.
      And that wouldn't even fit into the 10 greatest contributions he gave to the scientific world.

  • @s70glt100
    @s70glt100 Před rokem

    They didn't mention did the quebit actually move and end up with one que bit and 3 quebits or did it supposedly trade I agree with the first few comments that this video did an example Job of describing the history about this project thank you sharing it

  • @albertmendoza8330
    @albertmendoza8330 Před rokem +3

    Things like this make me happy to be going into physics.

  • @pstewart5443
    @pstewart5443 Před rokem +10

    When I imagine a gravitational-based wormhole I see it being one-way, ie you have one ER Bridge that points to say Alpha Centauri where the higher gravity end is on that side, then a second coming back which has a higher gravitational pull on our end, like near the sun. Just a little thought about the structure of these things.
    I have two great regrets in my life. One is knowing I will die prior to seeing mankind learning to work together in a way which is in the best interest of each other. The second is more personal.

    • @rhadiem
      @rhadiem Před rokem

      Help push the world to a more moderate view which conserves the best of the past while also reaching forward towards the future.

  • @southbayrickybobby5820
    @southbayrickybobby5820 Před rokem +3

    Incredible. Let the record show, Alexander Zlokapa. First person in the history of humanity to create and see a wormhole

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 Před rokem

      Unfortunately it was a simulated worm hole, which has been done before on classical computers. The quantum computer yielded the same results as the simulation ran on classical computers

    • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
      @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Před rokem

      @@tvre0 All because of Einstein 😉. The greatest scientific mind of all time.

  • @carlosy6029
    @carlosy6029 Před rokem +1

    This is amazing… I'm excited about how many new questions and fact we'll see in the near future with quantum computers gets better