U1 14

Terra incognita of the quantum dimension – The future of quantum physics

Slide 9 von 9

The future of quantum physics

In 1959, R. Feynman said in a famous speech at the California Institute of Technology: "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom". Sixty years later, his vision becomes reality, as quantum computers are actually being built.

Further reading: You want to program a real quantum computer? Here you go: IBM Quantum Composer


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On the one hand, we have vast mathematical and experimental evidence for the non-local, unobservable quantum dimension.

On one hand, further properties of the quantum dimension are understood and penetrated, through theory and experimentation, due to global research activities.

On the other hand, many aspects of the properties of the quantum dimension contradict our local, classic world view. In spite of all our understanding, an insurmountable barrier between the dimensions of non-local, non-directly observable quantum states and our local, observable space will persist.

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