Quantum Computing: Untangling the Hype

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  • čas přidán 1. 05. 2018
  • Quantum technology has the potential to revolutionise whole fields of computing; from cryptography to molecular modelling. But how do quantum computers work?
    Subscribe for regular science videos: bit.ly/RiSubscRibe
    Join leading experts to untangle the quantum computing hype, at this event supported by the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
    Artur Ekert works on information processing in quantum-mechanical systems. His invention of entanglement-based quantum cryptography in 1991 triggered an explosion of research efforts worldwide and continues to inspire new research directions. As well as showing that Bell’s inequalities can be used to test for eavesdropping, he has contributed to many important advances in the foundations and experimental realisations of quantum communication and computation. He has played a leading role in transforming quantum information science into a vibrant interdisciplinary field.
    Harry Buhrman got his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Amsterdam. Buhrman built the quantum computing group at CWI, which was one of the first groups worldwide and the first in The Netherlands working on quantum information processing. Buhrman’s research focuses on quantum computing, algorithms, and complexity theory. He co-developed the area of quantum communication complexity (quantum distributed computing), and demonstrated for the first time that certain communication tasks can be solved (exponentially) more efficient with quantum resources. This showed that quantum computers can not only speed up computations, but also communication - which opened up a whole new application area of quantum information processing. Buhrman co-developed a general method to establish the limitations of quantum computers, and a framework for the study of quantum algorithms, which is now textbook material.
    In 2001, Harry Buhrman became professor of algorithms, complexity theory, and quantum computing at the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and group leader of the Quantum Computing Group at the Center for Mathematics and Informatics (CWI). Buhrman co-founded QuSoft in 2015, a research center for quantum software, for which he is also co-director. During his career, Buhrman obtained various prestigious awards. Buhrman also has a leading role in the national Quantum Software Consortium that was awarded an NWO Gravity grant in 2017.”
    The event is chaired by award-winning science writer Philip Ball, whose latest book is entitled 'Beyond Weird: Why Everything You Thought You Knew About Quantum Physics Is Different.'
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Komentáře • 489

  • @akhilsankar
    @akhilsankar Před 5 lety +64

    Ladies and gentlemen I appreciate your focus to 26:40, the place where the whole essence of the talk reveals before us. And you are welcome.

    • @laithmohamad2215
      @laithmohamad2215 Před 2 lety

      ككمممممنننت ت 8نننظظنننططكخ ه اللببييدييييرىىىرييييدييسييييرييييييييسييبيييقيققققق ف ب ف فف4444ف4ف4444ففففقف444فف44 4

    • @laithmohamad2215
      @laithmohamad2215 Před 2 lety

      جكججج0

    • @laithmohamad2215
      @laithmohamad2215 Před 2 lety

      وا او ز جحا اه ههههههههههه له 5 غ غغ

    • @laithmohamad2215
      @laithmohamad2215 Před 2 lety

      نط ظ ز ز.طططططططط

    • @akhilsankar
      @akhilsankar Před 2 lety +1

      @@laithmohamad2215 what jibrish is this dear?

  • @aaronh920
    @aaronh920 Před 6 lety +222

    Video starts at 4:54

    • @johnemory7485
      @johnemory7485 Před 6 lety +1

      thank you

    • @crpf
      @crpf Před 5 lety +2

      mvp

    • @evolvingyang
      @evolvingyang Před 5 lety +3

      and ends at 3 minutes...it's a paradox

    • @chrisbkirov
      @chrisbkirov Před 5 lety +7

      no, at 11:49.

    • @CandidDate
      @CandidDate Před 5 lety +1

      There will be a time when every computer is a quantum computer. What comes after that, I wonder?

  • @toddpeterson5904
    @toddpeterson5904 Před 5 lety +19

    Artur Ekert part of lecture starts at 11:45
    Harry Buhrman part starts at 59:50

  • @erikdenhouter
    @erikdenhouter Před 3 lety +49

    You order a quantum computer, and a big black box arrives with "Quantum computer" written on the side. You open the box and there's nothing inside. You call the seller, and complain, but he reacts unexpected: "That's possible sir, that's the nature of the thing".

    • @tachodx7990
      @tachodx7990 Před rokem +7

      Something has written on the side of the box .
      That's mean someone has measured it.
      So it should be existing. ;)

    • @isaackitone
      @isaackitone Před rokem +2

      By you opening it, you made it appear at Andromeda earth, 2 million light years away. That's why your box was empty.

    • @dalladi
      @dalladi Před rokem +2

      So, Amazon, then.

    • @eustab.anas-mann9510
      @eustab.anas-mann9510 Před rokem +1

      @@isaackitone Good thing that's next door in our local group.

    • @marktrader490
      @marktrader490 Před rokem +3

      We're sorry, sir. It appears we accidentally shipped you a cat.

  • @shivammalhotra4823
    @shivammalhotra4823 Před 2 lety +6

    Arthur’s talk was very sincere, he took the challenging path of describing the essence of quantum computing, not just fluff. I also didn’t get everything but understood the quantum interference and how classical probability breaks down.

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones Před 2 lety +1

    Two speakers.
    Arthur Ekert at 11:42.
    Harry Buhrman is at 59:42.

  • @timsmith6675
    @timsmith6675 Před 6 lety +87

    I love The Royal Institution! Such great lecturers and topics for us science enthusiasts.

  • @anonymous.youtuber
    @anonymous.youtuber Před 4 lety +10

    59:40 LED lights actually do get warm. The last laugh is on Arthur 🙋‍♀️

    • @clevelandmilton8942
      @clevelandmilton8942 Před 3 lety

      Lo

    • @D4leBryant
      @D4leBryant Před rokem

      Yep, I just made the same comment with data. Staring at room temp of 79F reached a max of 130F in just a few minutes. Then Mr. Bryant just had to scroll to confirm his hunch that he wasn't the first person to point this out. They neglected scrolling further to see weather or not they may have been the third person to point this out. Lol See what I did there?

  • @sreeprakashneelakantan5051

    One of the best talks, thanks for sharing this

  • @ridgequinn9435
    @ridgequinn9435 Před 5 lety +43

    I appreciate the speakers time here, and I'm sure they're extremely knowledgeable.. however I think they were having difficulty dumbing it down for the rest of us. I am pretty interested in quantum mechanics so I could follow along somewhat, but it was difficult even for me to gather what they were trying to portray at certain points. That being said you don't have to be a brilliant speaker to be a brilliant person and I'm glad they're at least trying to help the rest of us catch up to all their hard work and dedication.

    • @just1john
      @just1john Před 4 lety +1

      or they have knowledge of a biased kind, one which must quantify (as oppose to qualify) everything and everyone. (Can we say cha-chin? BANK on it.) They do not (yet) know field modality which involves non-linear retroductive logic. (Yeah it's a word, but one of many hidden from us to keep us in line with quantity-based reasoning, on mass & weight, which ulteriorly upholds a continued dependence on being treated as such.
      A grand and unbiased (un-institutional) source to learn from, YT Theoria Apophasis with keywords Field Theory, Gravity, Magnetism, Dielectricity, Charles Proteus Steinmetz, Henri Poincaré, Nikola Tesla. And avoid all mainstreamlined cult-of-personalities for this. (For everything, really.)

    • @WRATHUSA
      @WRATHUSA Před 4 lety +2

      Those who can't, teach...
      Right..?lol

    • @MugenTJ
      @MugenTJ Před 3 lety +1

      Just like some professors I had in college: I either stayed home or fall asleep in class. Super boring and incoherent at times. They don’t try to transfer the knowledge, just spilling the content of their brain or certain book.

    • @JoJoUK2000
      @JoJoUK2000 Před rokem

      I couldn't agree more. This has to be the worst Royal Institution production I've ever seen ~ and I've watched a few. I thought the purpose of the RI was to make science accessible to the masses. This abysmal offering was about as accessible as a tightrope to a paraplegic! If the front entrance of the RI is as accessible as this lecture you'd have to be a rock climber just to get in the front door! Sorry guys but RI clearly has a different meaning now . . . Recondite Institution . . . do buck up your ideas!

  • @josidasilva5515
    @josidasilva5515 Před 3 lety +1

    Q bits are first placed into a steady state by reducing its movement (temperature), then they are excited by frequencies and may result in a more positive or more negative output (zero or one) or vibrate between the two stages, which we consider to be simultaneously a zero and a one. Each frequency may result in a unique output which leaves us with a wide vocabulary (instead of zero, one or the combination of zeros and ones); this rich language makes the communication speed as rich as the number of q bits you can combine. The interference can be caused by solar radiation or possibly human thought.

  • @christineliang4670
    @christineliang4670 Před rokem +2

    I like the part Artur explained how proof is a physical process rather abstract process. The 3-light-bulb problem. @58:00 when we made it, we proved it !! :P

    • @bostonjohnny1410
      @bostonjohnny1410 Před rokem

      TODAY'S LUNATIC MAYBE TOMORROW'S THEORETICAL PHYSICIST AND VICE-VERSA!😁

    • @bostonjohnny1410
      @bostonjohnny1410 Před rokem

      PERHAPS ALL THEORETICAL PHYSICIST ARE SCHROEDINGER CATS!!!😁

  • @AlexanderBukh
    @AlexanderBukh Před 4 lety

    48:00 where is this interesting picture from, please? can't find it online (i even bing-ed it, to no avail)

  • @phonsefagan3754
    @phonsefagan3754 Před 4 lety +14

    It would have been nice if one of the speakers explained how quantum computers work. For example: How do you create and maintain the entanglement of so many electrons? How do you input your data or query? How do you get the output from the computation? Can these processes not be explained in broad strokes?

    • @jackhung6929
      @jackhung6929 Před 2 lety +5

      I could not agree more. This talk is the opposite of satisfying. It like watching someone stumble about. You pray for deliverance, for some kernel of valuable information to be revealed, and you get nothing. There is no advancement in understanding.

    • @S.G.Wallner
      @S.G.Wallner Před 2 lety +3

      Completely agree, and this is exactly what I expected. I'm tired of every presentation start with history and the same uninteresting thought experiments. All speculation which never addresses the real deep questions and problems.

  • @-_Nuke_-
    @-_Nuke_- Před 6 lety +43

    Let me clear out this "imaginary" number part. A lot of people might not know it; But there are what we call "imaginary" numbers that have a weird twist where something squared can give you a negative number (or you can have a square root of a negative number).
    That is why they are called like that, but remember the name "imaginary" was coined back in the early days of mathematicians struggling to understand them. Today and after Riemann, we know that there is nothing spooky or imaginary or weird, a root of a negative number. The square root of a negative number, is the *natural extension* of the root function when we talk about numbers that live outside the x'x axes (the axis of the real numbers) and "live" on an axis at right angles with the axis of the real numbers.
    Basically imaginary numbers, are just numbers that have one more sign to indicate their position on a 2D plane. Like real numbers have signs ( + - ) to indicate their positions on the 1D axes of the real numbers. - for left + for right.
    Imaginary numbers "live" on a zz axis that is at right angles with the x axis and meet the xx axis on the number zero.
    So here If they are above the xx axis we have the sign +i
    And if the are below the xx axis we have the sign -i
    For example the number 5i is 5 units above zero on the zz axis.
    And using these ideas we can prove (not so easy but possible) that sqrt(-1) = ±i where " i " is just another number like 1, 2 and 3...
    All numbers are just symbols anyway right; And following that we can prove the i^2 = -1
    It might not make sense but we can prove it so it does. Like negative times a negative is a positive, here i^2 equals a negative, but remember i is not a positive number, neither it is a negative ;)
    So there's nothing spooky about it, don't let that confuse you.

    • @haulin
      @haulin Před 6 lety +2

      Great explanation. The 2D plane picture helps a lot. So are there numbers that we need to describe in a third dimension?

    • @-_Nuke_-
      @-_Nuke_- Před 6 lety +4

      Actually complex numbers are making up the 2D plane. Imaginary numbers are only making up the 2nd axis... Complex numbers fill up the entire 2D plane... They are a combination of real numbers plus or minus an imaginary number. For example z=5+4i ... 5 is the "real" part (well basically numbers on the x axis) and 4i is the "imaginary" part (well basically numbers on the z axis).
      Beyond that we have the Quaternions czcams.com/video/3BR8tK-LuB0/video.html that I know very little about
      And beyond that god only knows :D

    • @jycapuras
      @jycapuras Před 6 lety +3

      Thank you for this clarification... it is most elucidating!!! The geometric description illuminates it... BRAVO NUKE!

    • @-_Nuke_-
      @-_Nuke_- Před 6 lety +2

      You are very welcome Jose!

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien Před 6 lety +2

      For really top-tier graphical representations of mathematical concepts that are traditionally considered difficult to visualize, check out 3 Blue 1 Brown.

  • @GuniMatthiasson
    @GuniMatthiasson Před 6 lety +16

    Thank you for making a really complicated concept almost understandable. I think the beamsplitter examples explain the difference between quantum and classical probabilities neatly.

  • @hg1007
    @hg1007 Před 4 lety +2

    Great presentations. I got finally a better understanding of QC.

  • @RoGeorgeRoGeorge
    @RoGeorgeRoGeorge Před 6 lety +9

    @Harry Buhrman: 59:39 LED lights do get worm, too, just not as much as the incandescent ones. To keep the LEDs from melting, they are mounted on a heat radiator.

    • @kennethflorek8532
      @kennethflorek8532 Před 5 lety +1

      I know it was only a joke, so it doesn't matter, but it is surprising that a technical person is blithely unaware that LEDs do get warm. The best information I could find leads to the conclusion that old incandescent lights turn about 3% of the energy into visible light (lumens) and the LED version about 14%.

  • @netional5154
    @netional5154 Před 5 lety +9

    Great talk, thanks! Lots of examples to get a feel for the field. I liked the engineer and light bulbs example as an analog how to make use of the physical processes rather than just the mathematical abstraction.

  • @D4leBryant
    @D4leBryant Před rokem +4

    Actually the LED light bulbs offered as the new standard to replace incandescent bulbs do still dissipate some of their consumed energy as heat. I grabbed my non-contact temperature gun and pointed it at the bulb in my lamp which was at ambient room temperature of 79 degrees F. When I turned it on, it immediately began to increase in temperature at a constant rate reaching a maximum 130 degrees F in just a few minutes. So technically as long as the rooms are not too distant from one another the engineers solution is still valid.

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Před rokem +1

      All temperature guns are non-contact lol that's what makes it a gun

  • @jeffmorris9893
    @jeffmorris9893 Před 2 lety +8

    Once they figured out the slide projection misbehaviors, the presenters relaxed and ended up giving a smashing good program. Well done.

    • @Tagurrit
      @Tagurrit Před rokem +1

      Agreed. Once relaxed things moved along well.

  • @SicilianDefence
    @SicilianDefence Před 6 lety

    Cool and thanks for this topics. Do talk more about Qbit and its operators.

  • @grandpaobvious
    @grandpaobvious Před 6 lety +8

    George Spencer-Brown devised a "square-root of not" circuit in the 1950s that used an "imaginary" logic value that resembles a two-phase clock signal.

  • @christineliang4670
    @christineliang4670 Před rokem +1

    I also like @48:06, that nature figured it out how to use quantum interference, that the bacteria knew how to grab a hard-to-find photon and channel to its chemical reaction center, interesting!

  • @phillipalexandercarr1462

    I suggested to China quantum project recently reported on by CGTN did the calculation show any organised vibration like chaos theory in the computers method of calculating and build it's own algorithm in any vibratory patterns...?

  •  Před 6 měsíci

    As long as you're willing to break the assumptions in the lamp puzzle, you don't even need LEDs, there are hundreds of methods:
    · Send two people, one in each room, then shout. (the car mechanic solution)
    · Place a mirror into the hallway.
    · Make a hole in the wall.
    · Use a conduction tester to map out the wires from each room and then combine the two maps.
    · If the lamps produce any amount of light, use an infrared camera. (diffuse, but interferometry can remove the wall from the data)
    · Bribe or threaten the puzzle creator so that they tell you the solution.
    · Spend a few years developing a super advanced telescope, point it at an exoplanet and watch the reflected light from Earth to see the setup process in "real time". Or just make a time machine at this point…

  • @hugo3222
    @hugo3222 Před 4 lety

    I have a question at 7:25.
    The two images are obviously used to document some kind of progress.
    But which progress?
    The progress in technical engineering achieved by the R&D department?
    Or the progress in social engineering achieved by the HR and PR departments?

    • @violetmoon4236
      @violetmoon4236 Před 4 lety

      These images present stage of progress in classical computers and Quantum Computers, according to the presenter. QCs are now in a very early stage, and could be compared to the early stage of classical computers.

  • @prajnadattameher6210
    @prajnadattameher6210 Před 6 lety

    a tear on my eye around 13:50

  • @Gribbo9999
    @Gribbo9999 Před 2 lety

    1:03:00 in the other version of this picture Schrödinger is missing.

  • @timsmith5339
    @timsmith5339 Před 4 měsíci

    I definitely understand this subject a little more now, but am still a long way from properly getting it. One thing that came out of this, is that it seems that no problems have yet been solved by a quantum computer. If this is correct, what is the nature of study on quantum computers at the moment? Also, when do we think a real solution to a problem will be output by a quantum computer?

  • @schweizerd6303
    @schweizerd6303 Před 5 lety +72

    He is like one of my uni lecturers (Im sure there are many more out there) that mumbles on and on and the entire class is puzzled, then comes the exam and the entire class fails and he wonders why. However I have no doubt he is a genious but has no creative teaching skills.

    • @rustycherkas8229
      @rustycherkas8229 Před 2 lety

      Only a genius would fail to recognise there are two monitors 'buried' in the audience that render exactly the same graphic being shown on the big monitor he cranes his neck to see...

    • @peterwan9076
      @peterwan9076 Před rokem

      Ekert is a very bad in presenting his material. For those who barely understand the subject and manages his work would have difficulties in explaining the concept to laymen. This is true in the cutting-edge research. For example, Einstein would not be a good teacher in relativity until Hermann Minkowski came along to put the concept of spacetime in a 4D perspective. But of course, I am not comparing Ekert to Einstein. You know what I mean.

  • @chrisbkirov
    @chrisbkirov Před 5 lety +5

    51:18 The Hitchhiker's Guide reference :)

  • @HelsinkiFINketeli_berlin_com

    Any good video on quantum hacking and cracking? And quantum firewalls and such?

  • @eugenbarbula9661
    @eugenbarbula9661 Před 5 lety +2

    "I don't really feel like a prophet to be able..." you are a very modest man, this was the best talk I've heard so far about quantum computing. I hope to hear more of you.

  • @bailahie4235
    @bailahie4235 Před 4 lety

    Always good to hear a Dutch English accent (the introductory congenial lady), funny that it feels so strongly "at home" for me. (I'm Dutch as well.) Ok, back to business - now I'm going to start listening the lecture. ;-)

  • @troglokev
    @troglokev Před 5 lety +3

    How do you do I/O, in view of the principle of indeterminacy?

    • @curtiscorrigal3356
      @curtiscorrigal3356 Před 2 lety

      Look it is infinity...unlimited discrimination~😆😱😉😂😎

  • @ashwanikumar6008
    @ashwanikumar6008 Před 6 lety +14

    Amazing content
    Loved it 😊

  • @urielpelaezcdmx
    @urielpelaezcdmx Před 4 lety +2

    I liked a lot the info in the slides. 👍

    • @anonymous.youtuber
      @anonymous.youtuber Před 3 lety

      So did I, it seems to me the slides are more effective than his speech in conveying information. It must be hard for a genius to explain something to a lay person. Nevertheless, he enhanced my very basic understanding of the topic.

  • @MeltedPing
    @MeltedPing Před 6 lety

    Thanks great lecture!

  • @dancoulson6579
    @dancoulson6579 Před 6 lety +13

    Can anyone go to these lectures?
    Or are they only for certain people?
    Looks like it would be an interesting day out.

  • @rohitchat5538
    @rohitchat5538 Před 2 lety

    So practical quatam computing hardware and software so thank you very much to you all to explain about ❤️ 🙏❤️quantum comuters

  • @njgjhrjd
    @njgjhrjd Před 4 lety +3

    Notice how at 1:07:22 Harry Buhrman’s quantum random number generator is in superposition of being inside the bag and being somewhere else. Mr. Buhrman proceeds to conduct an experiment, but never tells the outcome. This bit of quantum information is now forever gone :)

  • @hainish2381
    @hainish2381 Před 4 lety +1

    Using photons, Is is possible to generate, with quantum physics, 2 sets of entangled random numbers?

  • @TechNed
    @TechNed Před 6 lety +4

    Back in the '70s when having to confront AC calculations for the first time, it was 'i'. I've often wondered why it later became 'j'. Now I know! The only thing I really thought I knew about quantum computing was, that by taking every path to a solution, previously time-consuming calculations can be performed quickly. These presentations have expanded my awareness so thanks for the great upload.

    • @MrAlpacabreeder
      @MrAlpacabreeder Před 2 lety +2

      It became j when electrical and electronics engineers needed to use complex equations and already used i for electrical current

    • @TechNed
      @TechNed Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrAlpacabreeder thanks. Somehow, we used 'i' for both and they never became confused because of the context in which they appeared, but what you say makes complete sense. We used 'i' for AC components, loop currents during analyses and also for instantaneous currents. 'I' was generally, though not always exclusively reserved for DC current.

  • @SamVekemans
    @SamVekemans Před 6 lety +15

    I love talks like these, it helps me sleep :)

  • @stevekessell9255
    @stevekessell9255 Před rokem

    What was the date of this talk??? 2018?

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 Před 5 lety +12

    Quantum Computer: Your electric bill might be $2, or $2 Million. Due to the Uncertainty Principle, we don't know!"

  • @shafayat1676
    @shafayat1676 Před 2 lety

    4:45 start
    2016 IBM made QC that is 5Q-bit
    6:11 IBM Q Experience
    8:13 richard fineman first introduced QC

  • @jonathankovacs1809
    @jonathankovacs1809 Před 4 lety

    Reminds me of one of my college professors a brilliant person but you really had to pay attention to have any hope of passing the class.

    • @philard
      @philard Před 3 lety

      My professors were all better teachers then this.

  • @TheBinary0101
    @TheBinary0101 Před 5 lety +1

    I love the fact that it's NOT sponsored by Squarespace; or @t; or Audible; or World of Tanks, etc.

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you, we're a small independent charity, and we'd like to stay that way! We do rely heavily on our members and patrons for this, so if you are able to, we would greatly appreciate your support on Patreon - www.patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution

  • @SamanthaP_123
    @SamanthaP_123 Před rokem +1

    Seems as though the next step is a mathematical harmonic to be found which increases probability greatly.

  • @zholud
    @zholud Před 3 lety +1

    Kolmogorov axiom IS right. It is the assumption that the path are mutually exclusive that is wrong. Or something else in the perception of reality is wrong. Axioms are right by definition.

  • @rohitchat5538
    @rohitchat5538 Před 2 lety

    Ok I will learn theory description in the video ❤️🙏 today itself is my preference to understand so ❤️🙏

  • @ashoknaganur8551
    @ashoknaganur8551 Před rokem

    Came to know about the importance and need of quantum computing

  • @nofearnodoubtnodisbelief5950

    That's what I love about our reality. Someone comes up with an idea of how things should be then someone else makes it happen

    • @naarvmaan
      @naarvmaan Před 3 lety

      Someone Poor and intelligent often got these ideas. And someone rich with opportunities made it happen. As far as history is concern.

    • @takster050974
      @takster050974 Před 3 lety

      True whatever we come up with, lots af those ideas will work overtime. I always wonder about that.

  • @StorytellerStudios
    @StorytellerStudios Před 4 lety +2

    The first speaker lost me at "Hello". Explaining probability math and the way quantum physics (interference) changes classical equations (and experiments) is incredibly difficult. I don't speak the language, thus it is like listening to an explanation of a potential solution to a complex problem (which nobody fully understands) spoken in Russian. The example at 44:07 made the most sense to my limited intellect. Nonetheless, this channel, The Royal Institute is AMAZING and reflects the best of the internet!

  • @hamspam7647
    @hamspam7647 Před 2 lety

    Great video. Very informative

  • @nschulz5698
    @nschulz5698 Před 6 lety

    Interesting talk but you have to stick with it. A good supplement to other quantum discussions.

  • @JohnGilbertmoore
    @JohnGilbertmoore Před 6 lety +4

    Damn. Him explaining that *Green Sulfur Bacterium* uses *Quantum Computing* is mind blowing.

  • @WinrichNaujoks
    @WinrichNaujoks Před 4 lety +5

    I think I'm more confused now than I was before.

  • @ztoob8898
    @ztoob8898 Před 5 lety +9

    I always thought the "IBM Q Experience" involved John de Lancie putting you on trial for the crimes of Humanity, or something.

  • @axelcarre8939
    @axelcarre8939 Před 3 lety +2

    Why so many downvotes? This is the very first "almost-in-depth" video I'm given a chance to watch tbh

  • @Jimoshi1
    @Jimoshi1 Před 4 lety

    Sadly conditions you need to acheave for this to work is just too harsh for it to be common commersial product. BUT i think that a centers and cloud technologies with this would be amasing.

  • @percih70
    @percih70 Před 6 lety

    no Q&A?

  • @thegoodkidboy7726
    @thegoodkidboy7726 Před 6 lety

    How many qubits can a Q Experience user access now? I know Rigetti's upgraded access allows up to 19.

  • @debasishraychawdhuri
    @debasishraychawdhuri Před 2 lety +6

    One thing though, LED lights do get warm, not as warm, but they do get warm.

    • @CompetitionChris
      @CompetitionChris Před 2 lety

      That's true. My LED flashlight is super bright and it gets pretty warm.

  • @jakeroosenbloom
    @jakeroosenbloom Před 6 lety +16

    Great lecture

  • @SchoolScienceProjects
    @SchoolScienceProjects Před 2 lety

    I like looking down my You-Tube while listening to this.

  • @SnowiDragon
    @SnowiDragon Před 3 lety +1

    Huh. I'm so lost lol
    So we will be using questions derived from laws and mathematical formulae we currently believe correct, which are initially derived from observation and theory, written and tested on the original base type of computer as well as we were able (traditional CPU). We then ask a higher level system we invented, that we have to trust we asked precisely correctly, to find the optimal answer?
    Didn't think there was a way to invent scientific faith but here we are. Amazing

  • @chriskiel765
    @chriskiel765 Před 2 lety

    have you ever walked into a lecture and 30 minutes later realised you are not in the right room. My brain wasnt ready nor able to compute. The LED light joke made me feel normal. Thank you.
    for the intensity.

  • @funkengruven7773
    @funkengruven7773 Před 6 lety +6

    A wonderful topic with poor execution. Wish you would do this one again with speakers that can express their thoughts clearly and in a semi-organized manner... Should label this video "Quantum Computing: Tangling the Hype"...

  • @mikeg4972
    @mikeg4972 Před 5 lety +17

    I need "Quantum computing for dummies"

  • @danielbrown9393
    @danielbrown9393 Před 6 lety +2

    Best lecture I've ever watched on quantum basics.

  • @rohitchat5538
    @rohitchat5538 Před 2 lety

    So understand your calling ❤️🙏

  • @TheNefari
    @TheNefari Před 5 lety

    The biggest question will be:
    Will it run Crisis?
    On a serious note why did he not show how to link the photons? 1:11:00
    That would have been the most interesting thing here, the other stuff was boring
    meaning either to high or low to make sense to a "normal person"

  • @pethameno
    @pethameno Před 5 lety

    Amazing

  • @Thomas_Geist
    @Thomas_Geist Před 4 lety +1

    I'm a fairly clever guy. Very high IQ and a communications engineer. Also taken a lot of computer science classes and at one time could program in 3 languages. The double slit experiment has always fascinated me and I'm sufficiently knowledgable to know something about epistemology and logic. Okay... Listening to this I felt like the child that noticed the King had no close on. Children should not have been allowed in the audience for fear of nightmares.
    What a complete waste of my time. "Incoherence theory?" Sounds like the entire thing is incoherent. When they can tell me whether to put my chips on black or red and win more than 50% of the time I'll be impressed; and the boys at Las Vegas will put out hits on these guys so we'll be back where we started.

  • @frankfrances3893
    @frankfrances3893 Před 2 lety

    In all these lectures of particle physics and super computing, it appears as if we are entering the era of the event horizon. And if that isn't enough we are actually quantum computing theories into dark matter (1) and dark energy (-1) and super impose; entangled neutron (0). This collapse of the wave function would seem to have the process capability of 3D printing. Cad Cam design capabilities to transfigure perhaps biological matter into RNA and DNA strands. It even sounds like the Star Trek concept into replicators. I have no idea of software concepts that tap into a infra scan within the matrix,, for it seems that classical computation we presently have is biased upon measuring the electron value as 1 while the anti matter or neutron as 0 yet all reactance and the least amount of friction still is the key. It would then seem as if our future will meet the other Nickel side plane of the galaxy as this universe enters into the next 12000 yrs. of quantum computing.

  • @keefebaby
    @keefebaby Před 5 lety

    It’s very interesting the way they keep trying to compare the old fashioned classical computers with the new quantum computers, there is a very big difference you didn’t actually need those computers to run the software you could do it all with pencil and paper if you wanted to, be very slow but can be done,but the problem with quantum computers is they don’t know how to program them even if they could afford a pencil and paper

  • @jakeoconnor6998
    @jakeoconnor6998 Před 2 lety +3

    quantum physics is abstract to the level where one needs to tear themselves away from all interferences (generally referred to as "reality") to have a hope of understanding a single qubit. It takes an especially talented person to be able to translate their understanding of how something works (in terms of the fundamental workings of the universe) in a manner that is succinct, fluent and coherent. All that said, he still struggles at the most difficult question; the one that has plagued humankind for at least as long as I remember: "can I go back (to the previous PPT slide)?"
    Personally, I've been conditioned to hit the reset button and confuse people with drawings on the blackboard. We can add "patient" to the list of this man's attributes.

  • @scottfullner9939
    @scottfullner9939 Před 6 lety

    And what was the hype and how did you untangle it? Hmmm... would have appreciated more sticking to the point and more clarity in answers to your thesis statement.

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 5 lety

    Discovering QC Algorithm = processing formulae in a coherent "phys-chem" pulse-duration => degree of proof of conception in QM-Time Principle Actuality.., of Quantum Fields Modulation Mechanism of probabilities in potential possibilities Time Duration Timing in Eternity-now Superspin Superposition-point...-> Quantum Operator Interference. (It's leaky)
    I've always wondered, how is a half-silvered mirror not a frequency-dependent diffraction grating/filter?
    No difference in QM-Time Principle In-form-ation terms.., only linear and transverse frequency modulation, axially-tangentially e-Pi-i -> alignment/coherence.
    Branes and Brains are the leaky devices of Universal Quantum Operator Computational Existence. Such is life.
    Well composed lectures..

  • @thehappyatheist1931
    @thehappyatheist1931 Před 5 lety +2

    I love quantum theory but my head hurts to understand it. Anyone who has the guts to explain it is a good person by my vote.

    • @manloeste5555
      @manloeste5555 Před 2 lety

      There are many concepts that can facilitate intuitive understanding. Mentioned in talks here on the RI yt channel and I also like to watch the (german) videos of Gaßner, Lesch and Ganteför. The more different perspectives you get to know, the better you can get your own picture of this initially less intuitive topic.

  • @WandaDeeBackroads
    @WandaDeeBackroads Před 6 lety +10

    He is talking about what is on the screen behind him but you only show me a glimpse of the screen. I need to be able to read the content as he is talking about it, not just watch him wave his hands around.

  • @SandroAerogen
    @SandroAerogen Před 3 lety +2

    4:50 - The thing actually starts.

  • @badrbellaj1212
    @badrbellaj1212 Před 4 lety

    excellent

  • @JustFamilyPlaytime
    @JustFamilyPlaytime Před 4 lety +1

    Is a sum of histories actually a probability sum?

  • @MadDragon75
    @MadDragon75 Před 5 lety

    The Angle particle: when mater and antimatter coexist.

  • @jimdocherty3454
    @jimdocherty3454 Před 2 lety

    A great introduction to the wonderful Quantum Computer, but as usual, we can't get the slideshow to work smoothly, wtf

  • @SC-bg8wf
    @SC-bg8wf Před 2 lety

    The level of the talk was far above the lay person level. The speaker started with very simple and immediately jumped to much more difficult. He sounded like he was talking to other physicists that need to learn about quantum computation.

  • @tedmosby9409
    @tedmosby9409 Před 6 lety +4

    i though the same thing the first time i seen 1 it reminded me of the computers that filled rooms in the late 50s and could do simple math, basically a calculator we can do it it ten we are well more advanced now , i will do this just hire me

  • @iwersonsch5131
    @iwersonsch5131 Před 3 lety +2

    1:06 So Aphelios was designed by The Royal Institution all along!

  • @Pianoscript
    @Pianoscript Před 4 lety +1

    There is no spooky action at a distance: entangled photons simply alternate their spins synchroniously and opposite each other since this is how they were formed: The Garon Principle states that entangled photons must from the get go, be of opposite magnetic fields and of opposite phase( simply put, mirror images of each other). During entanglement, their angular momenta are simply coupled and so the photons do not oscillate but rotate in unison. The moment of de-entanglement simply sets the spins depending on which part of the oscillation the photons are on at the time (remember opposite phase of each other) and which direction of rotation they are set off on ( one will rotate left, the other right 100% of the time). And that's the truth!

    • @manloeste5555
      @manloeste5555 Před 2 lety +1

      But important to add that no hidden information is the reason for their entangled behaviour.

  • @samwelndonga8795
    @samwelndonga8795 Před rokem

    With quantum interference, even our brain has somehow this error, tell someone of things related to certain category then omit the oviours once in that category. Then tell the subject to repeat those list of words, somehow their brain will reintroduce the things you omitted. HOW do we call that error in the brain.
    What if all the superposition were assigned some words, then let those words play with each other by triggering other superposition. Then feed books into the quantum just to see how the output records will be.

  • @MrNerudo2
    @MrNerudo2 Před 5 lety +2

    Just because it won't be in your phone in the future unless huge changes happen. The P vs NP problems a Quantum computer could solve would itself propel us even farther into the future.

  • @plapbandit
    @plapbandit Před 6 lety +3

    I got to play with qx3!

  • @scmacsart
    @scmacsart Před 5 lety +2

    A computer that can and will do whatever the hell it wants. There is your killer AI right there.

  • @johnlawrence2757
    @johnlawrence2757 Před 3 lety +1

    This is what I have understood the double slit experiment to be. But he appears to show a ray of light consisting of one photon (width, presumably: if the ray exists in time the source will emit a stream of photons won’t it?) . And he appears to show the photon splitting into two AT SOURCE. So the two slits are not what creates the split particle. Why they chose to go in the opposite direction after passing through slit doesn’t get explained. Nor how you generate a ray of light one photon in width.
    So this bloke doesn’t seem to quite follow what he is talking about, which accounts for his very hesitant manner.
    It looks to me as if quantum computing - like nuclear energy - is being developed by people who don’t understand the theory of how they achieve the activity they do, and have got to where they are through trial and error with very sophisticated electronic equipment.
    So maybe the theory is being developed after the practical activity has been achieved: you learn to ride a two wheel vehicle and then afterwards you work out the theory of how motion allows you to defy the law of gravity
    One wonders for example if perhaps QC technicians are actually unwittingly accessing particle level below the photon level, rather than dividing the photon into two.
    According to the Maharishi, the energy of which all particles at every level are comprised originates as pure thought. So wave function comprises the text of the thought itself. Like a groove on a record man. And the deeper level of consciousness at which the thought originates the more powerful its impact is in the material field.
    Of course to accept this as the explanation of quantum behaviour you have to accept that consciousness pre-exists creation (all contributors to RI lectures start jumping up and down at this point screaming PROVE IT!!!! WHERE ´S YOUR PROOF) and that, by logical extension, creation itself is the consequence of a thought. In pure Consciousness. It is,though, the only possible explanation that has no defaults at all. It all works perfectly. Reality is n that all bona fide research in whatever branch of science you look leads to this conclusion. Including what little actual research has been achieved in evolutionary biology

  • @Dfgysc
    @Dfgysc Před 5 lety

    Quantum bits or 'qubits' can exist in a superposition state of both zero and one simultaneously. This means that a set of two qubits can be in a superposition of four states, which therefore require four numbers to uniquely identify the state. So the amount of information stored in N qubits is two to the power of N E R D S

    • @frankfahrenheit9537
      @frankfahrenheit9537 Před rokem

      Do you really think that the whole e,g, Netflix video library can be stored in a single 1000 qbit quantum computer?

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed Před 6 lety

    Someone buy both these men a pint!