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The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality

Quantum theory is our very best description of the microscopic world of atoms and their constituents. It has given us lasers, computers and nuclear reactors, and even tells us how the sun shines and why the ground beneath our feet is solid. Yet the quantum world defies our sensibilities - it is a pl...

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Autor principal: Nicholas Brealey
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Nicholas Brealey 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2256620
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author Nicholas Brealey
author_facet Nicholas Brealey
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description Quantum theory is our very best description of the microscopic world of atoms and their constituents. It has given us lasers, computers and nuclear reactors, and even tells us how the sun shines and why the ground beneath our feet is solid. Yet the quantum world defies our sensibilities - it is a place where objects can be in two places at once, influence each other at opposite sides of the cosmos and nothing is as it seems until you measure it. Why is the quantum world so strange? Where does it begin and end? And what does this mean for the bedrock of reality? In attempting to address such frontier questions, physicists have come to realise that the quantum world promises exciting new technologies: the ability to communicate with absolute security, computers more powerful than anything built before and even quantum teleportation. In The Quantum World, leading physicists and New Scientist take us on journey through the quantum world, its mind-bending properties and the technologies transforming our world. There is a sting in the tale: is quantum theory truly the ultimate theory of reality?
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spelling cern-22566202021-04-21T19:18:02Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2256620engNicholas BrealeyThe quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of realityGeneral Theoretical PhysicsQuantum theory is our very best description of the microscopic world of atoms and their constituents. It has given us lasers, computers and nuclear reactors, and even tells us how the sun shines and why the ground beneath our feet is solid. Yet the quantum world defies our sensibilities - it is a place where objects can be in two places at once, influence each other at opposite sides of the cosmos and nothing is as it seems until you measure it. Why is the quantum world so strange? Where does it begin and end? And what does this mean for the bedrock of reality? In attempting to address such frontier questions, physicists have come to realise that the quantum world promises exciting new technologies: the ability to communicate with absolute security, computers more powerful than anything built before and even quantum teleportation. In The Quantum World, leading physicists and New Scientist take us on journey through the quantum world, its mind-bending properties and the technologies transforming our world. There is a sting in the tale: is quantum theory truly the ultimate theory of reality?Nicholas Brealeyoai:cds.cern.ch:22566202017-04-20
spellingShingle General Theoretical Physics
Nicholas Brealey
The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title_full The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title_fullStr The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title_full_unstemmed The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title_short The quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
title_sort quantum world: the disturbing theory at the heart of reality
topic General Theoretical Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2256620
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