Ack, the bomb sniffing dog just ran over my feet. The free wireless at the Albuquerque airport is nice, but it always takes me 10 minutes to connect (the trick: about 5 enables/disables of my wireless card. Strange.) Well, I’m Boston bound. Anyone want to bet if I make my 35 minute turnover in Denver?
Day 7
Santa Fe Ski Basin, yesterday. A few inches of new snow. Snow was still good from the big storms earlier in the week; I especially liked the snow in the trees. Slowly I’m learning where some really neat runs are on the mountain. Sadly the top of the mountain was cloudbound most of the day. On the other hand, this made it feel like I was descending from the heavens when I would come out of the clouds. Falling out of the clouds to see the spectacular view over Santa Fe is not a bad day of skiing, I must say.
Nerdliness
Via Something Similar, I discover what many of you, I’m sure, have already ascertained:
Why isn’t anyone bowing down before my nerdly godliness?
The Difference Between Time and Space
If you really want your head to spin, I recommend Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 011602 (2005), “Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking Origin for the Difference Between Time and Space” by C. Wetterich:
In this Letter we pursue the perhaps radical idea that the difference between time and space arises as a consequence of the ‘‘dynamics’’ of the theory rather than being put in by hand. More precisely, we will discuss a model where the ‘‘classical’’ or ‘‘microscopic’’ action does not make any difference between time and space. The time-space asymmetry is generated only as a property of the ground state and can be associated to spontaneous symmetry breaking.
I think this is the first time I have ever seen anyone use SO(128,C).
And the Earth Shook
From Nature:
The devastating earthquake that struck the Indian Ocean on 26 December was so powerful that it has accelerated the Earth’s rotation, geophysicists have declared. They estimate that the shockwave shortened the period of our planet’s rotation by some three microseconds.
The change was caused by a shift of mass towards the planet’s centre, as the Indian Ocean’s heavy tectonic plate lurched underneath Indonesia’s one, say researchers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. This caused the globe to rotate faster, in the same way that a spinning figure-skater accelerates by tucking in her arms.
I don’t know which is more impressive, that the earthquake could cause enough mass to move to change the period of rotation, or that we can actually measure this change?
Profile of a Quantum Theorist
Nature (433, 8 (2005)) has an article profiling four young theorists, and among these theorists is quantum computing’s Dorit Aharonov:
A theorist of errors
Growing up on Einstein Street in Haifa, Israel, Dorit Aharonov was perhaps destined to study physics. But she pursued other interests before finally settling on quantum computation. Haim Watzman reports.
To enter Dorit Aharonov’s office is to experience a sudden transition between order and disorder. The corridors of the computer-science building at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem are stark, white and neat. Aharonov’s office is a jumble of red-and-orange patterned cushions, article reprints and wicker furniture. It’s an appropriate setting for a theorist who has proved that when disorder reaches a certain level, the physics of the quantum realm switches into the classical domain of the world we see every day.
Aharonov devotes herself to the theory behind quantum computers. As-yet unbuilt, these machines would harness the power of quantum mechanics to perform tasks that defeat conventional computers — such as factoring large numbers. Aharonov, now 34, has already made important contributions to this goal by showing that a quantum computer could perform reliably and accurately despite a ‘noisy’ environment.
Physics runs strong in Aharonov’s family. Her uncle, Yakir Aharonov, is a physicist at Tel Aviv University, and her father is a mathematician who taught her the beauty of numbers when she was little. She later chose physics and mathematics for her undergraduate studies, but the quantum world did not initially capture her imagination. She wanted instead to use physics to study the brain.
A chance encounter
“I wanted to solve the problem of consciousness,” she recalls. But she began to think that the problem was still beyond the reach of today’s science. “Then, one day, at a wedding, a friend asked me for advice about what direction to take in the study of the brain. I advised him to check out what people in computer science were doing,” she says.
Realizing she should take her own advice, Aharonov went to the Hebrew University’s computer-science building to find someone to talk to. She was directed to Michael Ben-Or and, as she knocked on his door, she says that she had a strong feeling something important was going to happen. It did. Ben-Or told her about quantum computation. “It fascinated me. It was mathematics, physics and philosophy all in one package,” she says.
Back then, in 1994, the problem facing theorists such as Ben-Or was how to prevent a quantum computer from crashing. All computers make errors when they operate, but quantum computers are more susceptible to failure. This is because the quantum states on which calculations depend are very delicate: complex phenomena, such as the spin states of atomic nuclei, can store quantum information but this data can easily be lost if the particles interact with their surroundings. A computer can never be perfectly isolated from its environment, so there will always be ‘noise’ in the system and, inevitably, errors will arise. Moreover, correcting such errors is almost as difficult as doing the calculation in the first place. So will it ever be possible to do a reliable quantum calculation?
“That was the problem I posed to Dorit,” says Ben-Or, who became Aharonov’s dissertation supervisor and later her collaborator. Working with Ben-Or, Aharonov proved that at a constant but low level of system noise, a quantum computer can still produce accurate results1.
“I consider her to be one of the most outstanding young people in this field,” says Peter Zoller, a theoretical physicist at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. Zoller wants to build a quantum computer, and he says that Aharonov has been instrumental in laying the theoretical foundations on which a real machine could be constructed. As well as her work on error tolerance, he cites an important proof2 Aharonov developed with Oded Regev and others while working at the University of California, Berkeley. The proof showed that two existing models for quantum computing are actually equivalent and, as a result, made writing quantum algorithms easier.
While at Berkeley, Aharonov extended her work on computers to address a fundamental puzzle presented by quantum mechanics — why its laws are evident in the world of elementary particles, but not in everyday life. At what point does the world switch from looking quantum to looking classical? Is it simply a matter of scale?
Aharonov showed that for many noisy quantum systems, there is a level of noise above which a transition to classical behaviour is inevitable. Such transitions are much sharper than expected from other theories that predict a gradual shift away from quantum behaviour3.
Ben-Or says that what sets Aharonov apart is her boldness. As a graduate student she was not shy about contacting leading figures in the field to discuss their work, he recalls. Zeph Landau, a mathematician at the City College of New York who collaborated with Aharonov on the model equivalence paper, says that she is focused but not single-minded, finding time to discuss other pursuits.
Aharonov says that balancing life and work is essential to her research. Like many theorists, she says that she has her best ideas when not thinking about work at all. Her daily yoga session is particularly rewarding, she says: “It disperses the fog. My intuition becomes sharper. When there is less struggle, ideas become clear.”
Eastern ideas about the interconnectedness of everything also influence her work. For instance, Aharonov is not fixated on the actual construction of a quantum computer. “The most interesting thing that might come out of an attempt to build one is the discovery that we can’t do it,” she says. By failing, she adds, we might discover some entirely new physics.
HAIM WATZMAN
Haim Watzman is a freelancer based in Jerusalem, Israel.
References
1. Aharonov, D. & Ben-Or, M. Preprint at http://xxx.lanl.gov/quant-ph/9611025 (1996).
2. Aharonov, D. et al. Preprint at http://xxx.lanl.gov/quant-ph/0405098, (2004).
3. Aharonov, D. Phys. Rev. A 62, 062311 (2000).
I first heard Dorit speak at the QIP conference in Chicago in 1999. What I remember most about the talk was that all of the sudden the little I knew about quantum error correcting codes crystalized perfectly for me during her talk.
Book Reviews
I have discovered that I would make a fine film critic, but that there is a difference between a fine film critic and a good scientific book reviewer. I am reminded that my grandfather used to regularly send in letters to the editor of his local newspaper. Is being a bag of inflated opinions genetic? Well, time to throw away my first attempt at a book review, and remind myself that scientists abhor opinions.
Well, Hello There Feller
Again, I’m working hard on my talk for QIP, this time listening to Mozart’s 9th, when I notice that something is definitely different outside my office window once again:
The difference is that there is less brush in this picture.
Day Six
The last two days have been rather stormfilled. So, I couldn’t resist this morning and headed up the Santa Fe Ski Basin for a half day of skiing. Around two feet of snow had fallen over the past two days with around 10 inches last night. My first run I had the usual reaction to lots of powder and was pretty temid, but by the next run I was going crazy. Skiing in the glades was particularly ripe with a lot of the snow not even tracked out when I left around noon. I’ve also already found a couple really nice secret stashes. Oh, and I also hit a tree. Or well I got slapped in the face by some large braches and now it looks like I’ve been in a fight. Damn tree sucker punched me.
Let It Snow
I was working so hard on writing my talk for QIP, that I didn’t even notice that right in front of my face, outside my office window, it had started snowing: