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The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon

The phenomenon that Einstein thought too spooky and strange to be true What is entanglement? It's a connection between quantum particles, the building blocks of the universe. Once two particles are entangled, a change to one of them is reflected---instantly---in the other, be they in the same...

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Autor principal: Clegg, Brian
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: St. Martin’s Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1545784
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author Clegg, Brian
author_facet Clegg, Brian
author_sort Clegg, Brian
collection CERN
description The phenomenon that Einstein thought too spooky and strange to be true What is entanglement? It's a connection between quantum particles, the building blocks of the universe. Once two particles are entangled, a change to one of them is reflected---instantly---in the other, be they in the same lab or light-years apart. So counterintuitive is this phenomenon and its implications that Einstein himself called it "spooky" and thought that it would lead to the downfall of quantum theory. Yet scientists have since discovered that quantum entanglement, the "God Effect," was one of Einstein's few---and perhaps one of his greatest---mistakes. What does it mean? The possibilities offered by a fuller understanding of the nature of entanglement read like something out of science fiction: communications devices that could span the stars, codes that cannot be broken, computers that dwarf today's machines in speed and power, teleportation, and more. In The God Effect, veteran science writer Brian Clegg has written an exceptionally readable and fascinating (and equation-free) account of entanglement, its history, and its application. Fans of Brian Greene and Amir Aczel and those interested in the marvelous possibilities coming down the quantum road will find much to marvel, illuminate, and delight.
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spelling cern-15457842021-04-21T22:42:27Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1545784engClegg, BrianThe God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenonGeneral Relativity and CosmologyThe phenomenon that Einstein thought too spooky and strange to be true What is entanglement? It's a connection between quantum particles, the building blocks of the universe. Once two particles are entangled, a change to one of them is reflected---instantly---in the other, be they in the same lab or light-years apart. So counterintuitive is this phenomenon and its implications that Einstein himself called it "spooky" and thought that it would lead to the downfall of quantum theory. Yet scientists have since discovered that quantum entanglement, the "God Effect," was one of Einstein's few---and perhaps one of his greatest---mistakes. What does it mean? The possibilities offered by a fuller understanding of the nature of entanglement read like something out of science fiction: communications devices that could span the stars, codes that cannot be broken, computers that dwarf today's machines in speed and power, teleportation, and more. In The God Effect, veteran science writer Brian Clegg has written an exceptionally readable and fascinating (and equation-free) account of entanglement, its history, and its application. Fans of Brian Greene and Amir Aczel and those interested in the marvelous possibilities coming down the quantum road will find much to marvel, illuminate, and delight.St. Martin’s Pressoai:cds.cern.ch:15457842006
spellingShingle General Relativity and Cosmology
Clegg, Brian
The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title_full The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title_fullStr The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title_full_unstemmed The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title_short The God effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
title_sort god effect: quantum entanglement, science’s strangest phenomenon
topic General Relativity and Cosmology
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1545784
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