50 Year Old Quantum Physics Problem Solved 112
notsosilentbob writes "This story about a 50 year old unsolved Quantum Physics problem at Eurekalert.org is interesting, if just for the discussion about the computing power required (SGI/Cray machines).
Unlike the blowhard from BlacklightPower, this sounds like an important breakthrough. " The problem solved is that of the scattering effects of three charged particles. This is important, as this event occurs in everything from fluorescent lights to the ion etching of silicon chips.
I like itt (Score:1)
It's just amazing... (Score:1)
I wonder when games with physics engines are going to be able to simulate the universe to this detail?
100 years? 1000 years?
It's just amazing how far we have come since the dawn of the information age!
OOoo .. pretty pictures (Score:1)
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Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
Newtonian physics and its euclidean geometries is far too cold, too exact, too exacting. Bring on the theories that tell us we live in worlds of probabilities: I want to win the lottery, dammit. My ancestors read the tea leaves before me, and soon I'll have a nice quantum computer in a cup of coffee. How much can anyone truly know for sure? Certainly I don't know much, so give me a theory that says no one else can be much more certain. Now that appeals to my insecurities and warms my cockles.
It's quite fitting that such breakthroughs be made on the threshhold of a new era of unprecedented cultural return to mysticism. I'm still betting in science's corner, myself.
Re:It's just amazing... (Score:1)
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Re:Okay, this time for real. (Score:2)
Scattering (Score:2)
I am trying to understand the importance of this discovery. Although the article mention the ionization process that lead to the grow of the flourenscent tubes, to the engraving of silicon chips, we have done all that WITHOUT understanding exactly how these things are done.
Can anyone tell me what this discovery for the "scattering problem" may yield, that is, apart from the Quantum Physics discipline?
Thanks in advance for any pointer.
Merry Christmas !!
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
That's a bit unfair (Score:1)
You're editorialising again, Hemos! An assessment of the majority reaction to the Blacklight Power story might make it seem safe to do so on this occasion, but public opinion would change pretty quickly if Randall Mills was vindicated.
Mills' claims are certainly outrageous but he's only raised enough capital from hardened venture capitalists to fund his research, and is turning would-be investors away in droves. He's obviously not a fraud. Even his critics in the physics community don't deny he is at least sincere. And don't forget he appears to have a better grasp of maths, chemistry and physics than most people - he's not ignorant or even unqualified.
His enthusiasm for his own theory isn't really enough to warrant labelling him a blowhard. It's not as if he's gone around badmouthing everybody who disagrees with him. If you believed you'd made a breakthrough that would turn science on its head, wouldn't you have something to say about it? Would that make you a blowhard?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not jumping on Mills' bandwagon either (yet). But if his ideas were completely without credibility then he'd surely have been forced out of business by now. I think we ought to give him the benefit of the doubt until his work has been properly peer reviewed by people who are qualified to assess it.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
> but one or two quantum computers will be able to
> solve a couple of the really tough problems we
> never thought we could solve
You remind me of that quote where someone said that there would only ever be a few computers in the world, mostly in specialised research...
What makes you think they won't become mainstream in the same fashion that current technology did?
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:1)
Hemos did not make that statement. notsosilentbob is the one who made the comment, Hemos just let the comment through unedited.
In a Slashdot news post, text in italics is written by the submitter. Plain text is written by the Slashdot crew.
Re: Editorializing and /. - a bit offtopic (Score:1)
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
huh?
Newtonian physics and its euclidean geometries is far too cold, too exact, too exacting
...too unable to explain too many phenomena
Now that appeals to my insecurities and warms my cockles.
Speak for yourself.
I'm still betting in science's corner, myself.
And which 'science' did you use for your psychoanalysis of practically the entire Physics community? From what I've gathered, it tends to be more the people enamored of mysticism/religion who are offended by quantum theory.
Chris
not exactly "sorta on, sorta off" (Score:2)
Potential for distributed computing? (Score:1)
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
Not entirely on topic. (Score:1)
This discovery has nothing to do with metric specifically, and (rather amusingly) happened in an Imperial (and imperious, sometimes) country. But it's still representative: countries using common systems (metric) allow many to work together, across borders, to solve problems that we could not work out alone. In this case it was three American schools, but in other cases it has been schools or researchers from separate continents.
Yes, NASA messed up the metric thing. But that was based on one country not matching *all* the others, right? So imagine if this discovery is recanted in 3 weeks: "Oops, we were using inches and gallons, not centimeters and litres." This happens too often (even once is too often).
I'm not sure what my point is. I think it's a combination of "cool" and "why isn't everyone metric yet?"
Cam
- Cam MacLeod
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
"I think there's a world market for about five computers."
-- attr. Thomas J. Watson (Chairman of the Board, IBM), 1943
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Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:1)
Ummm... I understood that. That's why I was saying speak for yourself.
Chris
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:1)
Snigger. The history of con artists shows this not to be the case. I wish you were right, but too many people want to believe the claims of snake oil salesmen.
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:1)
Now I get it:
Plenty of people out there would cheer this breakthrough, not for its obvious worth as a furthering of scientific thought, but as a further entrenchment of quantum physics as a dominant theory for the mechanations of the universe, because frankly, it suits their personal philosophies of how the universe should remain somehow mystical.
I parsed the 'their' as the people who subscribe to quantum theory, that threw off my interpretation of the sarcasm, i.e. I knew you were being sarcastic, but I mis-identified the target of the sarcasm.
My apologies.
Chris
Re:beowulf cluster (Score:1)
just my two cents
Hmmm. (Score:1)
If you want to make a comment, put it in the forums with everybody else's and let moderation take it's course.
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
Scattering and Quantum Computers (Score:1)
Thanks for the pointer.
Call me dumb as you must, but I do have difficulty connecting Quantum Computer with the solving of the "scattering" problem.
I thought someone have already prototyped some sort of "quantum" computer, before the "scattering" problem was solved.
That goes back to my original question - that we have done things like Flouresence tube and engraving chips with ion beams _before_ anyone have a definite answer to the "scattering" problem, and my original question is - what that discovery will yield for us, apart for making the Quantum Physicians feel much better?
Again, thanks for your pointer.
Re:Scattering (Score:2)
If this holds up (and it appears to be doing it so far) it will assist us in making predictions about what happens to very small or very high-energy things. As the article said, we make flourescent tubes and play with plasma, but up to now it mostly has worked by accident. The breakthrough is the solution of the simplest case, but it's a step towards manipulating plasma properly on purpose.
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
Forget an aibo. All I want at this time of year is massive moderation reform.
Perhaps not that much? (Score:1)
My point is that perhaps the "discovery" of the "scattering solution" may not be yielding much practical effect, like the onet you have mentioned - distributed computing.
Perhaps the "discovery" itself may be used for predicting when and where the "scattering effect" may occur, and with the ability to predict, new branches of science may finally be able to mushroom.
Re:beowulf cluster (Score:1)
Yeah, it's a stretch, but you asked for it.
Re:Hmmm. (Score:1)
Re:See 2.4 #6 (Score:1)
seen it? hell I helped write it! ;)
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Re:You mean like Clipper, CSS, etc.? (Score:1)
:)
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:1)
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
Re:It's just amazing... (Score:1)
Re:Scattering and Quantum Computers (Score:1)
Let's look at a caveman who clubs someone over the head with a wooden club. When his foe becomes dead or unconcious, he might not know *why*, but he knows the effect. He might deduce things like removing branches and leaves that soften the blow make it more effective. But if he learned the reasons behind it, he could make a more effective club using rock, or maybe even metal. Sure, wooden clubs work fine, but isn't a stone axe just so much more convenient and stylish? :)
e,e and e,2e scattering (Score:2)
Numerical methods are very good in that you know the degree of error. Increase the number of grid points, and the error will decrease... (but the computation time will increase accordingly.) This one fact means that the results produced are meaningful - they can be compared with experiment.
Now why are these scattering events interesting? Well there is a slightly more complicated collision where the incoming electron knocks out an electron - leaving the atom in an excited state. The excited atom then de-excites itself by emitting yet another electron. (Auger emission.) You can't do this with hydrogen (not enough electrons.) - However, the nobel gases work well...
This second type of collision is very interesting, in that the distribution of outgoing electrons is related to the Fourier transform of the wavefunctions of the electrons in the atom... You can "map" the distribution of an electron in an orbital with this technique. This in turn provides tests on the quantum theory...
This also happens in ionisation events that form Aurora.
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:This is ludicrous. (Score:1)
meta knowledge (Score:1)
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
Re:Scattering and Quantum Computers (Score:1)
Re:Scattering (Score:2)
Well, your top end Pentium III/Athlon probably has more computing power than an average mid-80's Cray (maybe not necessarily the same I/O throughput although they probably aren't too far off on that either). Since last decade's high-end CPU cores often get migrated into this year's embedded processors, I would expect that in the next decade most homes and cars will contain more than 2 processors which are equivalent to mid 80's Crays.
I would agree that the class of problems which can use the capabilities of quantum computing is currently limited and few seem to be applicable to the average home. However that may change after we have had access to quantum computers for ten years.
Around 1987, I took a class in Biophysics with Dr. Hoffmann (who is more well known for his work in immunology). At the time I told him that I figured in a little over a decade we might have massively parallel processors which would be able to tackle the protein folding problem. He basically told me I didn't really understand the magnitude of the problem. Recently, IBM have announced their project, Blue Gene, whose stated goal is the creation of a computer capable of fully solving the protein folding problem within five years. I was off by a few years but was still fairly accurate as software engineering or physics estimates go
So, you won't need a Cray to run your microwave, but you may want one (or two for backups) 80's Cray equivalent to run your house and have it respond intelligently to your voice commands. High-end cars already have very powerful computers running their active suspensions. Who knows what applications we may come up with for quantum computers. Currently you can't even get one working in a university lab, but if we have molecular nanotechnology in 40 years, it may be quite conceivable for every house to have one. In the latter case the only question is will there be household applications (distributed RC5 doesn't qualify) which require one?
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
Please do not disregard the "Feel" (Score:1)
While you might be true in saying that we ought to improve on the "Feel" thing - in sinking the 8-ball or in other endeavors - but please do not disregard the _importance_ of feel.
There are times I have done thing by "feel" alone, and those are the times I could have done extensive calculations and such, but there is always that little voice (call it instinct if you may) that tells me to go by "Feel" - yea, sounds like Obiwan's "Feel the force, Luke" thing, doesn't it?
I have tried to explain what "Feel" is, but I just can't. It's something you gotta have within yourself.
Anyway, Merry Christmas !!
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:2)
No one accepts his theory yet but at least the guy has gone out of his way to attempt to get independent experimental confirmation.
Getting 25 million out of conservative utilities and retired investment bankers from Morgan Stanley is gonna take a *little* more than a nice smile and shiney shoes.
I don't think the journalist gets it. (Score:1)
This is my own opinion - I personally do not think the journalist who wrote the piece actually gets it.
Most things that we have here, today, from gunpowder to electronic wonders, the ideas behind them all originated not from tweaking equations, but from intuition and inspiration.
Sometimes it requires "clicks" in the mind's eye to find a true "EUREKA!". Tweaking equations, IMHO, just doesn't make it.
After all, tweaking equations require _prior_ equations to exist, or there won't be anything to be "tweaked", right? And most of those prior equations owed their existence from the "clicks" of somebody's mind's eye.
Sorry, I've wandered to far out of topic. Gotta stop when I'm still able to.
Merry Christmas !
Exact Solution? (Score:1)
I'm confused by this, how did they find an exact solution to the scattering problem if they are using a finite version of the wave function? Wouldn't that be an approximation of the true wave function, which extends to infinity?
Re:Okay, this time for real. (Score:1)
Re:This is ludicrous. (Score:1)
Re:It's just amazing... (Score:1)
Screw that.. (Score:1)
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:1)
Funny how so many otherwise well-informed people still think that "mysticism" must necessarily be opposed to science. I agree that the current trend towards unquestioning acceptance of "crystals", horoscopes, channeling, creationism and so forth is alarming, but to extend this trend to argue that "since these things are 'mystic', mysticism is 100% wrong" doesn't follow.
Read some of Fritjof Capra's work to see how scientific insights can have a mystic aspect. Yes, many people jump on that and just start mixing "quantum" and other buzzwords into their tealeaves, but I think it's perfectly possible to study the workings of the universe in a rigorous scientific way and keep a sense of marvel about the whole thing.
Re:OOoo .. pretty pictures (Score:1)
seems to me you could just put a redirect on the story, instead of a simple anchor. but then, all one would have to do is click it, then quickly click back without reading. oh well
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:1)
No problems with quantum physics (Score:2)
QM is the most successful theory of all time. (Score:2)
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Re:It's just amazing... (Score:1)
I am not really into QM, but this was my argument:
To simulate the entire universe on quantum level, you would need to simutate the state of every quark(?). To simulate a single quark, you would at least need one quark.. Thus to simulate to whole universe you would need at least every quark in the universe, and the universe would be its own simulation..
If this is bullshit, please let me know.. It sounds pretty solid to me (and my now convinced friend)..
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:2)
The academic establishment tends to make things very difficult for anyone who breaks ranks. Sensible scientists will keep quiet until there is irrefutable evidence to support Mills' theory.
He is basically a very obsessed individual who went WAY off track a long time ago. If he were properly schooled in mathematics, physics, or chemistry he would have been a handful to get back on track.
This is pure speculation.
Instead, look at what he is proposing. He is reinventing particle physics, without advanced training in particle physics.
So? Chemists need to know quite a bit of physics (especially including quantum physics). They can't even win their degree without it. Ditto higher maths. Quantum physics itself isn't particularly difficult to master anyway, its certainly no harder than any other branch of chemistry. Particle physics today is just tedious (it's like zoology) and is still 90% speculation.
He is reinventing single hydrogen chemistry, without substantial training in hydrogen chemistry.
Well, he is trained as a chemist, and so am I. Are you? What is "hydrogen chemistry"? anyway? As far as the mainstream is concerned, "hydrogen chemistry" is very straightforward, hardly deserving of a whole branch of chemistry all to itself. It's only got one damn electron for heaven's sake! It's the only element for which solutions have been found to its wave equations.
What's more, your remarks suggest strongly that you haven't even read his published work, from which it's abundantly clear that he does have a very good grasp of "hydrogen chemistry" as it's generally understood. He just happens to have something new to add to it.
And the comments of at least one mathematics professor (see book comments at Amazon) indicate his mathematics is merely good enough to prevent his investors from personally double checking him.
I read Ulrich Gerlach's assassination piece too. His criticisms deserve serious consideration. I'm not really able to assess the criticisms about the maths as it'd take more time than I have. But some of it may well be a failure of interpretation. Both holes in the maths and misinterpretation are likely to occur at this stage as it's a new theory and it hasn't even been submitted to referees yet. The criticisms may not be wholly significant; they don't necessarily kill the theory even if they're valid. If they did, then quantum mechanics, supersymmetry, string theory and inflation theory would never have got past first base (and the Linux kernel would never have got past version 0.1 either
Michio Kaku doesn't swallow Mills' theory either, and I respect Kaku (I have a couple of his books). But even eminent scientists are sometimes wrong, especially when defending something. And Kaku doesn't attack the maths. I'd be surprised if he's even bothered to look.
BTW, there's another comment [amazon.com] there now written by former Assistant Secretary of Energy Shelby T Brewer, who is also now involved with BlackLight Power. It lists Mills' impressive credentials as a scientist which must be genuine whatever you think of Brewer's objectivity.
If Mills turns out to be right it will set the whole of 20th Century physics and chemistry on its head. It would mean that people like Kaku have been wrong all their lives. So you have to expect that the establishment would fight it anyway.
Remember that Einstein wasn't believed either until he had verified experimental results.
One thing is clear - he is one heck of a salesman. Persons which such personalities can often convince large groups of relatively uneducated people to follow them. He smells just like a snake oil salesman to me.
I might believe you if Mills showed signs of raking in all the cash he could before someone exposed him. But he's not, he's just taken enough to fund the business. This suggests he expects to make money out of his discovery in a more conventional manner.
Also note that the some of the scientists who've criticised his theory have gone out of their way to state that they believe he is sincere, just misguided. Scientists generally don't do that if they think someone is a fraud, they tend to come out and say so or else just leave it unsaid.
PT Barnum was right.
From the sublime to the ridiculous. Perhaps you understand Barnum's theory better than you understand Mills' theory and thus place more faith in it. Personally I don't think its valid to compare Mills with Barnum.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:eye am n eleet physisust (Score:1)
Get serious. No one cares about how many Barbies there are, for crying out loud. But Pokemon are important.
Yours Snorlax - WKiernan@concentric.net
QED wins again (Score:1)
The compute power required was large. They had to use Blue Pacific, probably the unclassfied machine, which has 1344 PowerPC604 CPUs. I wonder how much machine time was required, and how tightly coupled the computation is.
Re:Not entirely on topic. (Score:1)
Actually, I'm not so sure about that. I mean yes, obviously, any system would be fine, so long as it's consistent and made some sense. But much like different countries working together, there are other issues that might appear.
For instance, when people move from being youth learning to drive into university students in science, this puts extra learning curve on their backs. Or when students in elementary are learning about
What is actually gained, long term, from maintaining two separate systems? Short term, those who grew up with Imperial will be comfortable, but long term, we'd be maintaining the status quo -- people complaining about metric not being what they're used to. In perpetuity.
That just doesn't make sense to me.
Cam
- Cam MacLeod
Re:Scattering (Score:1)
Until now, the Schrödinger equations have been beyond the abilities of physicist to solve for anything but very simple situations. The exceptions have been where they've played tricks on the math and got solutions for more complicated, but very specific, situations.
This article is more descriptive of a more general approach to the problem, which could concievably make the Schödinger equations not just predictive, but also actually useful.
So, the real importance is that QM can now be used much more generally as a predictive tool, which has a number of incredible applications, mostly in high-energy chemistry. Watch for advances in materials, especially in displays, lights, and, I'd wager, explosives.
The mentions of etching silicon and flourescent tube is more to make the ideas more real, AFAICT. Other posts about the feel of pool and whatnot miss the point. Which is the the unfortunate consequence of the "real life" examples that get added to pop sci articles.
Re:A semi educated question... (Score:1)
The result of this hack is an arbitrarily close approximation of the actual electron probability functions. In QED, you don't generally look for an exact prediction of the electron's location. Most of the time you are looking for a usefully accurate model. The breakthrough is finding a way to make the problem computationally tractable (which is done by the "large distance" approximation). Finding a way to calculate the large distance in terms of the near distance in all cases is the big deal here.
There are two difficulties with any Newtonian three body model (where gravity is the dominant force). The first is gathering complete information (where are all of the interacting objects). The second is computer errors including the position rounding error (at 32 bits, or whatever) and the sampling error (how often does the computer recalculate *all* of the vectors based on updated positions?). Ballistic models that describe interacting particles in terms of probability functions can be much more successful, but run into difficulty during interpretation (the electron really can be in five different places, the spaceship cannot).
By reducing distant bodies to planar gravity fields (large distance approximation), we end up with spacecraft like the Galileo probe that made it to Jupiter with only a few small course corrections to make up for the slight inaccuracies in the approximated model. But beware, it's still just a useful model. Don't expect to hit the center ring halfway across the solar system with your eyes closed based on any model. You'll need to correct (or update) your model with empirical data to make it actually work.
So, to finally answer your question. The breakthrough is going the other way (from Newtonian three body to QED). Before this, however, the QED models didn't have any way to reduce the large distance wave functions to a useful approximation. Now they do. If the large distance approximation used can be applied or extended to more complex interactions, our models of quantum interactions will be dramatically improved and our ability to describe complex probabilistic events will become correspondingly more confident.
Regards, Ross
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:1)
Jason
Hemos didn't make that comment (Score:1)
cold fusion warmed over (Score:1)
Re:It's just amazing... (Score:1)
Well, off the top of my head, the following comment seems currently unprovable (certainly not proven by your comments):
To simulate a single quark, you would at least need one quark.
That is of course the basis of your statement. I personally do not see the inherent truth of that.
Additionally, I believe the original poster would be satisfied with a simulation of a subset of the universe or some small fictional universe following the same laws as our own. After all,
I wonder when games with physics engines are going to be able to simulate the universe to this detail?
poor word choice aside, sounds more like a plea for more realistic games, not for a simulation of a galaxy 5 million light years away from the game's setting.
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:2)
That's what I meant when I said: Sensible scientists will keep quiet until there is irrefutable evidence to support Mills' theory.
Or irrefutable evidence that he's wrong. I don't think there's either, yet.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:That's a bit unfair (Score:2)
Can you be more explicit? Or am I just supposed to believe an AC who may or may not be able to follow the maths?
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:Quantum physics and mysticism (Score:2)
Science is not about supporting what you think is "the right way the universe should work"; it is about making observations and constructing possible explanations based on those observations.
If the universe really does look random, blurry, and oddly mystical, oh well. People make value judgements; science shouldn't.
Re:Okay, this time for real. (Score:1)