Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? 174
Geoffrey Kidd writes: "There's a very interesting article
at EE Times about some research which seems to indicate
that an essentially unlimited number of bits can be stored in ONE electron. Hmmm. What if one
could encode every .mp3 file on Napster in one electron? :)"
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Imagine... (Score:1)
Imagine... how much pr0n you could store on one.
Imagine... how much pr0n you could store on a beowulf cluster of these.
Are there Linux drivers available for these yet? I know BSD drivers are available, but Linux is always late with new hardware support.
I wonder if Britney Spears the lasers and optics physicist thinks of this breakthrough in, uh, reporting by EETimes (well hell, it's not like anything is PROVEN.)
My bet is with the Britster.
REQUEST (Score:1)
So please, if you don't know what you are talking about, don't post as if you do.
Only 1 electron? (Score:1)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Its true, in this increasingly digital world, the fact is that you can store more data accuratly with an analog device (Theoretically). I think people are too quick today to dismiss anything analog as obsolete and out dated. Perhaps digital technology has surpassed analog for now, but it may not always be so.
I am not the only one who thinks there is too much emphasis on the digital. There was a recent article in a Discover on a man building analog robots. (Discover, Sept 2000 Vol 21, No. 9, Pg 86: Biobots) I don't know if it is also covered on the website, www.Discover.com [discover.com]. Analog devices use waveforms instead of descrete steps. This means that there can be numbers or states described that are not rational. (PI anyone?)
Sorry, my soapbox
transparent aluminum (Score:1)
Hey! Is this the guy Scotty gave the recipe to transparent aluminum to?
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
John
Re:Sorry to burst the bubble... (Score:1)
'Trasitive' in this sense basically means that X is transitive if and only if for every subset Y of X, Y is also a member of X. 'Well-ordered by' means that every subset has a smallest element with respect to that ordering.
John
Hm. Write the universe to one electron? (Score:1)
This whole infinite storage thing is fairly wild, but I'm trying to get a grasp on the infinities here. Does this mean that we could then encode a description of the contents of the entire universe in one infintesimally small member of it??
Re:Those #$!* electrons! (Score:1)
Yeah, it blew my mind, too. In fact, it was so mind-blowing I failed the course the first time through, largely due to my lack of understanding of that energy-well stuff. Truth be told, I still don't know what the hell an energy well is.
Of course, all that relativity stuff came easy after having read so many sci-fi books about space travel (particularly Speaker for the Dead). I breezed through that stuff.
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Precision (Score:1)
How many angels can dance on top of an electron (Score:1)
confiscated these now? (Score:1)
Think of each atom as a HD block (Score:1)
Chaos (Score:1)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Re:Encoding every mp3 file in one electron... (Score:1)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Yes, an eigenstate is the same thing as an eigenvector belonging to a certain eigenvalue.
The difference is that you need to choose a basis for you state space to talk about matrices and vectors, while the notion of state is more abstract and doesn't refer to a particular basis.
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
This is simply wrong, though a very common misconception by people who read about (but don't necessarily understand) quantum physics.
"[...] I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum mechanics," — Richard Feynman.
Cheers,
Lov Grover's research publications (Score:1)
I couldn't figure out from the abstracts which paper EE Times was referring to.
Re:Sad for SETI (Score:1)
Imagine an race with a more advanced understanding of physics than us, which enables them to make something which works like a "FTL radio" - us sometime in the 21st century, maybe? If they practise SETI as we know it and don't mind being detected, they'll certainly want to ping the universe with their new signal in the hope of a reply from someone who can receive it. But they might not consider it worthwhile to send electromagnetic-spectrum messages as well, and not just because of disinterest in backward technology or communication with backward civilizations. For example, suppose that we humans (or trans [transhumanist.org]/posthumans [transhumanist.org]) do develop "FTL radio" before 2101. That would mean that we would have gone from the invention of radio communications to its surpassment in less than 230 years (Marconi was born in 1874, and received his first patent on radio communications in 1896) - a blink in the history of humanity, never mind the universe. That's a tiny window to attempt to hit with a communication system which takes many thousands of years to cover the distance between stars. If we came to the conclusion that other civilizations were overwhelmingly likely to make the same transition in roughly the same length of time (and one could happily give or take at least one order of magnitude), then why bother with radio SETI? The inhabitants of an alien planet with a similar history might well come to the same conclusion. A different alien planet might be interested only in the kind of meaningful communication which would be made possible by a sufficiently fast system. Or perhaps no-one on the planet would even have thought of the possibility that anyone out there was sending or listening for ET radio waves - possibly because that planet never stopped off at radio on its way to "post-radio".
Speaking, I admit, as someone who has no expert knowledge of SETI or electromagnetic spectrum communications, this would surprise me a bit.
Consider our own chances of being detected. We've sent out our own deliberate markers, but we've put out a much larger number of transmissions that were never intended for communication with aliens, and a much greater variety of them, too. It seems a reasonable assumption that any one of our deliberate communication signals would be much easier to find and recognise than any one of the unintentional ones. But if you weighed all our intentional signals against all our unintentional ones, could you really say that if an alien did spot one of our signals, it would probably be an intentional one? Let alone that they would be so much more likely to spot an intentional signal that it wouldn't even be worth keeping an eye out for unintentional ones?
Our "SETI types" obviously shouldn't be looking for clones of 20th century Earth, but it seems likely enough that a detectable inhabited planet with might be in a similar position to Earth in this respect (or in the more extreme position of not making any deliberate transmissions at all) that looking only for deliberate transmisions would be unwise.
Is this practical for archival data (Score:1)
Thermodynamics limits (Score:1)
Re:But what about Heisenberg ? (Score:1)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:1)
Of course, the article doesn;t specify the type of infinity involved...
Re:what about the download? (Score:1)
Re:Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle? (Score:1)
Re:Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle? (Score:1)
Re:Those #$!* electrons! (Score:1)
Not true. This is the "infinite square well" setup. If the potential outside the area you're considering is truly infinite (i.e., 0 between points A and B, and infinite everywhere else), the electron is guaranteed to be between points A and B. If the potential is really high, but not infinite, then there is a non-zero probability that the electron will exist outside the well. I believe that the probability goes something like exp[-potential], but it's been a few months since I had any quantum (goddam Ph 2B).
There are some other interesting things that go on with these particular boundary conditions (something with sines and cosines), but I forget. Check out an intro Quantum book [amazon.com] for some more info.
-Chris
Good news / Bad news (Score:1)
The bad news is that you need 12 tons worth of equipment to play the music.
Re:SETI and Timeline Coincidence (Score:1)
If every /.er did it... (Score:1)
Just think, you may have created a monster! :-)
Re:Quantum storage... (Score:1)
Quantum phase storage manipulates the phase of the electron field NOT the spin of the electron.
"Our wave packets enable us to engineer atoms by adjusting the amounts and quantum phases of an atom's electrons"
Help....I haven't had enough pot yet! (Score:1)
The holographic theory and non-locality (Score:1)
I wish I could remember the article where I originally read this, but it is called the holographic theory of quantum physics, so named because something about the photographic qualities of holograms allows them to be non-local, i.e. one small element of a hologram can be developed into the entire image. Apparently this has a quantum physics analogue...electrons are also non-local, and therefore one electron could theoretically contain all the information of the universe. (Can you tell I'm not a physicist?
So if this is true, the amount of information stored wouldn't really be infinite, just very large...unless you consider the universe itself to be infinitely large.
Re:Additional details. (Score:1)
Isn't the resolution that you can define between two different states also equal to the uncertainty?
For instance if the incertainty was 5, yes I could have any of the states from 1-100, (and all the fractions inbetween) however, I couldn't tell the difference between state 4 and state 6 because I can only say that this state is state 4+-5, and the other is state 6 +-5.
Doesn't violating this break the uncertainty barrier? (I can't measure 5mV on my voltmeter, so instead I'll bump everything up to 5V and then it will tell me the difference between 5V and 5.005V)
I might be wrong, but I just got done with a 3rd year physics class and this was my understanding.
Ya can na' change the laws of Physics (Score:1)
How long? - Let's assume that you can read a single bit out of this electron in one picosecond. (10^-12 seconds). Each additional bit would double the read time (because of Heisenberg, and friends). My copy of DeCSS weighs in at 3145 bytes after being compressed with PKzip 2.50. This is 25160 bits. So, 10^-12 * 2^25160 ==> 8.2*10^7561 Seconds, which is many orders of magnitude greater than the lifespan of the universe. Of course, cutting things down to size by doing parallel processing would help. The most bits that could be read in 1 second would be 39.9, assuming no noise, etc. The practical limits of Analog/Digital conversion technology are past 24 bits of resolution, but not much more, so don't count on getting DeCSS into less than 1049 atoms any time soon. ;-)
--Mike--
Re:Sad for SETI (Score:1)
Maybe you're talking about some kind of evolution that I can't even imagine (and I would think you couldn't either, but perhaps I'm wrong). But, such an alien would presumably be aware of spatial dimensions. Radio waves would appear to them to be extensions of a wave phenomenom into many spatial dimensions.
Again, maybe these aliens would be just as aware of things on a very small spatial scale as large and not think much of such a thing, but one would think that they wouldn't ignore large wave patterns that seem to be generated by intelligence extending out across many thousands of light-years of space.
I would think that such aliens would be able to more immediately grasp the significance of radio waves (and all electomagentic spectrum phenomenon) than we are and would have uses for them (bouncing them off of other wave phenomenon, art, who knows). As I said, maybe I just don't have the imagination necessary to posit your aliens.
-Jordan Henderson
Oh! (Score:1)
One question I have is whether the "waveform collapse" of entangled systems is complete even for very weak environmental interactions like gas molecules bouncing off an object. Come to think of it, if I had a thermal random number generator in my laptop, would its chips be entangled to any degree each time a new number was generated?
If anyone knows of an online forum for this kind of Q&A or similar articles, would appreciate information.. thanks again.
Re: forking/quantum computin (Score:1)
But this and other articles have noted that there is a limit to the number of quantum bits (qubits) that can be assembled in a reasonably stable fasion. I do not know why, but I think we are up to between 4 and 7 qubits (IBM built something recently I think
I'll look on the net some more (more than I usually do), thanks.
The suggestion of modifying plastic to have metal characteristics by modulating these Coulomb potentials their laser can access is very wild. I remember a science fiction story (Doc E.E.Smith's lensman series, or possible A.E. Van Vogt.. or the Rama series?) in which the skin of a space battleship was strengthed to withstand weapons that would destroy ordinary metal in an instant, by using "molecular force generators"!! Sound familiar? I suppose if you just shined your laser on a corner of the piece of metal, the entire metal structure might be strengthened.. neat!
Re:REQUEST (Score:1)
Re:Additional details. (Score:1)
It's just that it took a long time for people to discover it hiding in the framework of mathematics. It made people nervous as well hence the original term "imaginary number". The ancient Greeks discovered the irrational numbers and had to hide them from the general populace for fear of mass panic.
The fact that it is required for QM (and QED among other things) is what forced people to recognize the reality of "imaginary" numbers.
---CONFLICT!!---
Re:bathtub (Score:1)
---CONFLICT!!---
Encoding every mp3 file in one electron... (Score:1)
It's a good thing you cannot patent elect... um. Wait.
I didn't say this. Don't want any ideas emerging here...
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:2)
Re:Addenum - yes, the number of states is infinite (Score:2)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:2)
Re:Sad for SETI (Score:2)
While I bask in the warm glow of your pity for me, let me point out what is ''obvious'' to us, now, was not even known 200 years ago and the bulk of it will probably be ludicrously outmoded 200 years hence. And that's us, the same race, in pretty much the same environment just separated by 200 of your Earth years.
If there are *aliens* out there with advanced technology, there is no reason for it to even be *possible* for a human to understand or even recognize it as a system; after all, our brains are of a finite size. In the same way that a dog will never truly appreciate music (howling tunelessly along because of a certain frequency content aside), surely more advanced races than us would beat us out with no more difficulty than we lock doors in front of our pets.
Anyway, the point was that the mere fact that we are still stumbling over these epoch-making concepts tells me - maybe you more advanced mutants don't need telling - that we may well still be too pathetic to imagine what medium would be the lingua franca for interstellar beacons &c used by hypothetical superadvanced civilizations.
Re:But what about Heisenberg ? (Score:2)
Life imitates Trek. IBM has invented just such a thing.
Additional details. (Score:2)
* Infinity isn't a recognised value in the Universe.
Prove it. All I see so far is hand-waving.
It's easy to show that it's _impractical_ to build a device with an infinite number of states, but it's certainly _possible_ (if you have an infinite amount of room).
* Whilst those orbits may be "theoretically" valid, any orbit which does NOT coincide with a valid point in space (which is also quantized, and not necessarily with the same step size), is an invalid orbit and cannot be entered.
Check that high-school physics textbook. Orbital radius goes up as the square of the energy level - even at it's smallest level, it's much too large to be affected by the granularity of space.
* Any orbit which is excluded due to any other phenomina (eg: Casimir Effect) also cannot be entered.
Other forms of noise will limit practicality long before the Casimir effect does. Regardless, the casimir effect wouldn't make any of the orbits impossible. If you had enough room for the electron shell to exist, the casimir effect would be irrelevent for orbits in that shell.
The Casimir effect also wouldn't have much of an effect period; it just affects the number and wavelength of virtual photons present in a region of space. So what?
* Of the remaining orbits, any orbit which would cause the electron to shift which nucleus or other particle it is orbiting, will negate that orbit and replace it with the corresponding new orbit around the new center point.
So suspend a single atom in a magnetic trap in vacuum, as the experiment in the article almost certainly did.
This (requirement that nothing else be nearby) also still doesn't affect whether the orbit is _possible_. As I said before, measurement concerns are already known to limit how many states you can use with practical equipment.
* Exact positioning of an electron is forbidden by the Uncertainty Principle, anyway
As above - this is irrelevant. It is the uncertainty principle that _gives_ us the wavelength of the electron, among other things. The electron orbits are _definitely_ large enough for this to be a non-issue (as they're more than a wavelength in size).
Summary: I'm afraid that your objections are based on a variety of assumptions that turn out not to hold, both about the nature of the experiment described in the article and about my own arguments. If you are genuinely interested in this topic, I'd strongly suggest picking up a first-year physics textbook and browsing the sections on quantum mechanics and atomic structure. It will be well worth it.
Re:Additional details. (Score:2)
For instance if the incertainty was 5, yes I could have any of the states from 1-100, (and all the fractions inbetween) however, I couldn't tell the difference between state 4 and state 6 because I can only say that this state is state 4+-5, and the other is state 6 +-5.
Doesn't violating this break the uncertainty barrier? (I can't measure 5mV on my voltmeter, so instead I'll bump everything up to 5V and then it will tell me the difference between 5V and 5.005V)
I might be wrong, but I just got done with a 3rd year physics class and this was my understanding.
The answer is "it depends".
You can measure a particle's energy with arbitrary precision, but get progressively worse resolution on its position as you do so (due to position/momentum uncertainty).
In this case, the escape hole is the fact that the electron orbits get very large at higher energy levels. The resulting position uncertainty isn't enough to make distinguishing the states impossible, even with the fineness of the energy measurements needed.
As for your measuring apparatus, what winds up happening (if I understand correctly) is that the time required to determine the electron's energy level increases. Time to distinguish between two states is (I think) some proportionality constant times the oscillation period of the photon that would be emitted or absorbed by the electron when changing from one state to the other. For finely spaced states, this is significant.
Addenum - yes, the number of states is infinite. (Score:2)
Re:Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle? (Score:2)
Re:Sorry to burst the bubble... (Score:2)
Have you rad the article? In what I understood of the article, it says that with a lazer the scientist induces a wave into the elctron, and then it's possible to read the wave stored in the atom.
The infinity of bits encoded would be stored in the time dimension, witch is infinity as long as I know. Then is want to store more data you just have to wait more to store it. It is something like a endless backup tape.
Things I don't know is do we have to wait for a specific point in time to start reading? Is there a limitation in the wave length, probably yes, for the reason above (it's a quantic value)? Does it run on linux?
--
"take the red pill and you stay in wonderland and I'll show you how deep the rabitt hole goes"
Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle? (Score:2)
Wait a minute... (Score:2)
"Where'd my hard drive go? It was here a second ago!"
cool (Score:2)
Upgrades (Score:2)
---
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:2)
---
Re:Excited electrons (Score:2)
Energy levels in electrons can be raised to stable values. Only when you knock them off the shelf do the return to a lower energy level and release a photon with energy equal to the difference betweent the prior and new state.
Quantum storage... (Score:2)
That and I think an electron would be a bit too small for storage purposes... I have enough problems losing CD-Rs half the time... no less a storage media where I could only know the angular momentum or the location, but not both...
always wear a grounding strap (Score:2)
electrons can store an infinate amount of data.. (Score:2)
how many electrons are there in ram? geez
The Bottom Line (Score:2)
Probably about 10 nanoseconds. Which is about as long as it takes for anything I put on a floppy to be lost.
Re:the one stone computer (Score:2)
-Pete
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:2)
Like "Egon Spengler" of the Ghostbusters, but with an "I"---and say the "on" as "en"---then add states.
As far as what they are, I couldn't say, but it probably has something to do with the eigenvalues [wolfram.com] of a matrix describing the electron?
--8<--
Re:But what about Heisenberg ? (Score:2)
This kind of makes sense since more data would be stored by a longer signal...
--8<--
Re:stability? (Score:2)
--8<--
Now where did that frickin electron go?.... (Score:2)
add compression... (Score:2)
WOW (Score:2)
--
Monkeys and Typewriters... (Score:2)
Re:Sort Algorithm (Score:2)
Only if you filled the whole address space with your data. If you use a finite portion of the space, you ought (one would think) to be able to find your data in a finite amount of time. And one would suppose that it would take you an infinite amount of time to write an infinite amount of data, so the seek time would be the least of your problems in that case. Or so it seems to my poorly educated mind at first blush.
On the other hand, if there are an infinite number of bits available, one would suppose the bits are in a random state before we begin to write to them. Perhaps this means that every .mp3 file on napster is already there, and you just have to find them. So perhaps the seek time is a big deal after all.
Now I just have to sit back and wait for the information theory people to set me straight... ;-)
Re:Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle? (Score:2)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:2)
For those who like such things: For any set, take any function which maps it into it's power set (transforms each element of the set into a subset of the set). For this function, consider the set of all points which are not within the set which they map to. This set might be empty, but it is defined for the function. Whatever the subset, no point can be mapped to it by the function in question (think about it!). So there is an element of the power set which is not mapped to by the function. No matter what the function is. No matter what the set is.
Re:electrons can store an infinate amount of data. (Score:2)
Napster-in-electron (Score:2)
Well, I guess you would then have the biggest collection of badly encoded and half finished mp3's in the world.
--
Those #$!* electrons! (Score:2)
Basically, for those of you who haven't had any quantum mechanics courses:
The uncertainty principle says dXdP>=h. Where dX=delta X (position), and dP=delta P (momentum). h is Plancks constant (on the order of 10^-34). It basically says we can never know both the exact position and momentum of an electron. The more closely we measure one, the more error on the other.
As for the integral of the wavefunction, the probability of the electron existing from -infinity to +infinity will always be 1 (obviously). The weird part is that if you take an electron and put it in an infinite energy well, the electron is bounded to exist in the well. It gets funky in that there is a small probability that it will exist outside the well also!
This shit blows my mind.
It's the wave... (Score:2)
what about the download? (Score:2)
Re:Sorry to burst the bubble... (Score:2)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:3)
the union of two infinite sets is always infinite
That certainly sounds reasonable; however, as I understood the article, they are encoding their ''infinite data'' in the precise value assigned to what I think is called a scalar quantity (the phase, I assume, perhaps stupidly, expressed as an angle). So the first bit says whether it starts as 0 degrees or 180 degrees, the second bit adds 90 degrees if it is set, the third 45 degrees if set, and so on.
So this ''infinite'' data set boils down to a single infinitely precise number, say, 36.789...etc degrees. So that was one electron, perhaps full of an infinite number of Metallica albums. Now if we cp that electron to another one to give to a friend, but we added a Lene Marlin track at the beginning of it (having better taste than our friend), clearly it will end up with a different phase angle, even though it has an infinitude of contents (in different order). The phase angle will even be radically different if the first few bits of the added data are quite different.
Well, that is why I think your objection is wrong in this case:
-Andy
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:3)
Like "Commander Taco" of Slashdot, but with an "I"--and say the "ommander Taco" as "gen"--then add states.
They're like a standing wave: they describe why electrons fall into particular orbits. You can read about it at [The Rotten Foundations of 20th Century Physics] [aol.com].
--
Um, this is *BASED* on quantum mechanics. (Score:3)
Um, this technique is _based_ on quantum mechanics. This is clearly described in the article.
An electron orbiting an atom can be at any of an infinite number of energy levels between the ground state and the ionization threshold. The researchers have found a clever way to arbitrarily set the probability of the electron being in each of these states, simultaneously - which gives them as many bits of data as they have states. They also have a clever way of reading back out all of this state probability information.
Limits to this are based on the time it takes the states to decay back to the ground state (which affects the lifetime of the data) and the time it takes to perform the read operation (which isn't stated, but which almost certainly lengthens for the closely-spaced energy states near the ionization energy).
No limits from newtonian/quantum mechanics, just ordinary engineering tradeoffs.
Excited electrons (Score:3)
This means that a memory made up of electrons is a dynamic RAM, and must be re-updated all the time.
Since altering the wave == exciting electrons, it takes energy. And the more improbable states you want (higher shells in the old atom-model), the more energy you have to inject. Thus, the number of states are not infinite, but restricted by the amount of energy available/feasable.
If I remember correctly, someone posted an article some weaks ago, calculating the theoretical limits of a computer of a certain weight and size. From what I can see, this aproach to storing information does not break this theoretical limit at all...
Re:Breaking News... (Score:3)
In an attempt to enforce this ruling, the FBI is developing a so-called "killer" electron known as "Quantumvore". Pending regulatory approval, the FBI plans to release large numbers of Quantumvores into the Internet infrastructure, in order to seek out and destroy banned electrons. Quantumvore is actually a type of positively-charged anti-electron known as a positron, which upon coming into contact with an MP3-encoded electron will annihilate with a release of energy determined by Einstein's famous formula, E=mc^2.
A number of physicists have expressed serious concern that the sheer quantity of MP3-encoded electrons now thought to be in circulation could mean that the release of Quantumvore will result in large explosions occurring within milliseconds of each other in countless locations throughout the world. Simulations indicate that such explosions are likely to be centered on college dormitories, which in some cases may have sufficient concentrations of MP3-electrons to trigger chain reactions, which collectively would be capable of utterly destroying the Earth.
An RIAA spokesperson responded to these concerns by saying "Without strong intellectual property protection, and the ability for monopoly content brokers to maximize revenue, the Earth may as well not exist anyway."
Stay tuned for further developments in this breaking story...
Possible to run an eigenprogram? What are we then? (Score:3)
Suppose you encode everything about a computer, its RAM contents and operating rules into a piece of data, basically a long number. Say you are doing something like dumping the VMWare PC emulator program and its memory buffers into this piece of data, along with your own program and also a bunch of other locations which are telltale bits that would only be set to true if certain instructions (your program) are executed in a certain order, so you can in a sense freeze a sequence of calculations, an overall machine state.
So in the end the last telltale will finally be set only if the results of the calculation which suposedly had been executed by this hypothetical (virtual) computer, was provably the answer you seek, i.e. the factors of a big prime number which could be multiplied together to show they are the right answer. A self-referential logic filter.
My conjecture (gleefully made without more knowledge of quantum physics than is available in lay publications..) is this. Could you use this huge number as a filter or reference beam to collapse the waveform of your recording medium, and read out the state of the virtual computer with the output of your program, in a picosecond?
It would seem that any Turing machine from a Cray to a ribosome (an rna tape device), could be simulated in this way, though smaller memory footprint/instruction set machines would be easier since they could be represented with less eigenstates. I wonder how many states would be the least amount necessary to simulate something useful.. if a full hardware abstraction is not needed and you can get away with just a language definition and virtual machine (yes like Java VM).
Would this mean you could run any program that can fit into the virtual machine in picosecond time? And if so, could you not in fact build a computer of any arbitrary capabilities by simply writing a pseudocode definition of how it ought to work? Final scary question.. The interior of a cell is a controlled environment and until the cell is queried by some process it is conceivable that some ribosomes could exist in superimposed states. Put another way, if you could solve the isolation problem it might end up to be cheaper to build the eigenstate computer with common cellular apparatus than by using big expensive lasers. What conclusions can you draw from this?
I think this is what was meant by a prediction I once came across.. that the coming century would create a new science of computing which is to today's computers as nuclear energy is to fire.
Like I said I hope someone can poke holes in this. The biggest problem seems to be universal laws about information, for example I understand that the recent sending of a light pulse at 300 times the ordinary speed of light was only possible because the leading edge of the pulse had enough information to reconstruct the rest of the pulse, suggesting that you could not send an entire packet of bits faster than the speed of light.
Re:Sad for SETI (Score:3)
Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:4)
Sorry to burst the bubble... (Score:4)
First off, at the sort of level you're talking about (single electrons), you're talking about a world that obeys Quantum Mechanics, not Newtonian Mechanics.
This makes a big difference. Newtonian Mechanics is essentially continuous. Regardless of how close any two points are, Newtonian Mechanics assumes that there are still an infinite number of points between them, and that this can be repeated indefinitely.
Quantum Mechanics is a strange land of discrete points with NO space between them, as far as the particle(s) under consideration are concerned. Particles jump from one state to another, WITHOUT passing any intermediate point.
This means that what "should" be inifinite, given a purely Newtonian view of the world, will always become finite in a Quantum Mechanical view of the world.
Space, Time, Energy - these are ALL quantized.
The practical upshot? You may be able to store a LOT of information in an electron, but it won't be infinite. And how much you CAN store depends on what valid states there exist at that time, which may or may not remain the same over time.
Sad for SETI (Score:4)
When I hear about cool, promising advances like this is always makes me sorry for the SETI types. How the aliens will laugh themselves silly at our hopeful sifting of the *radio*/stone-age technology spectrum for traces of them, when an advanced civilization would have stupendously cooler ''magic'' at their disposal.
Re:Excited electrons (Score:4)
It turns out that there are an infinite number of energy states between the ground state and the ionization threshold (look at a diagram of Hydrogen energy levels to see what I mean), so the amount of energy available is not a limiting factor. One practical limit is that the highly excited states are very closely spaced in energy. At some point they get too close for your apparatus to reliably read and write them. Also, when the thermal noise becomes comparable to the the spacing between states you are going to run into problems. I didn't notice any mention of temperature in the article, but I suspect they had to keep things pretty cold to avoid getting killed by noise.
So, from the sound of it, it seems like you might conceivably be able to get down to something like one atom per register (which is still pretty amazing), but don't hold your breath waiting for a single-electron replacement for your HD, or even your L2 cache, for that matter.
-rpl
Hold it... (Score:4)
I know..I know, all QM books say there are continuous eigenstates. But that's because QM works on the Minkowski flat space-time metric which is perceived as "background-fixed", i.e. not a dynamic metric like General Relativity's metric. The goal of physicists is to find a way to make QM "background-free", i.e. does not rely on a fixed-metric, or put it another way, to "quantize gravity" (which nobody really knows what it means, but people believed it means quantizing the dynamic metric, or "quantizing Space-Time").
So the people is pursuing a dream that is not viable.
stability? (Score:4)
One of the challenges encountered with increasingly smaller data storage media is the possible damage caused by stray radiation... at this scale, one alpha particle could ruin your whole database! (or maybe one x-ray, or static electric shock, etc.)
Although it is interesting to see just how much information could be encoded in a single electron, one would need some redundant electrons in other atoms to also encode the same information. (Think:RAQE a Redundant Array of Quantum Electrons.)
Further, if we can step away from the concept of trying to encode EVERYTHING in just ONE electron, and take a look at how much information can easily and reliably be encoded in one electron (pulls a number out of his hat) say 4 bits, and one has (pulling another number out of his hat), say 10 electrons for redundancy, that's still one heck of a dense recording medium! Several terabytes of data could be stored in a very small space!
How small a space? There's the unanswered question of just how close together these can be packed and uniquely targeted by the laser. (Or lasers, to speed reading/writing to the electrons.) I see issues with just trying to keep the atoms in a fixed location, how finely focused the laser beams can be adjusted, etc.
Still, this sure holds promise for one incredibly dense storage medium for all my MP3s!
Re:Hold it... (Score:5)
Re:Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:5)
The answer is correct but your reasoning is false.
You took a bad example. The electron spin can only take values of plus or minus one half relative to an arbitrary quantization axis. When you measure the electron spin, you always measure one of the two of possible states, meaning that you can store exactly one bit in the electron spin.
If you want to store more data in an electron, you have to use another physical quantity which has more possible states. (in qm jargon: Use an observable with has more (infinite) eigenstates). This is what the article talks about, they are using the "place" quantity (observable). As is easy to imagine, this observable has an infinity number of possible values (eigenstates): an electron can be anywhere.
disturbing trend (Score:5)
Call me cynical, but do those guys up in Slashland use MadLibs as a base for their stories?
[person] writes, "[person, lab] has
[verb]'d a way to [verb] the [noun]".
Wow. How many [contested file format]'s
could you [verb] with this??
[person] writes, "the [hated industry]
is [verb]ing [loved individual]". Ya know,
there used to be a day when [verb] was not
only legal but encouraged.
[person] writes, "a [greek letter] release
of [obscure linux app] has just hit [release
site]'s page. Hoo boy, now our world is
[adjective].
</HUMOR>
.02
My
Quux26
Re:But what about Heisenberg ? (Score:5)
We'll have Heisenberg compensators to take care of that.
- JoeShmoe
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Can One Electron Hold Infinite Data? (Score:5)
Yes.
(though it depends wholy on the detail in which you can measure the state)
Imagine an arrow. It can spin on it's centre of gravity 360 degrees. If it points directly left the bit value is 1. If it points right the bit value is 0.
Going clockwise, pointing at the bottom half is for values the start with 0, the top half is for bit values starting with 1. Both have 180 degrees freedom of movement. Breaking the 180 degrees of each half into 2 points (3 sections) defines the second bit value. Iterate.
Keep going and breaking smaller and smaller sections to define further bit values. 60 degrees down left would be 00, etc...
Any real world thing (a bicycle for example) has an infinite number of possible states and your ability to reap binary values stops only at the limits of your measuring equipment.
(you know, I spend too much time amusing myself.)