For the first time, scientists have created a
quantum computing experiment for studying the dynamics of wormholes – that is,
shortcuts through spacetime that could get around relativity's cosmic speed
limits.
Wormholes are traditionally the stuff of science
fiction, ranging from Jodie Foster's wild ride in Contact to the time-bending
plot twists in Interstellar. But the researchers behind the experiment,
reported in the December 1 issue of the journal Nature, hope that their work
will help physicists study the phenomenon for real.
"We found a quantum system that exhibits key
properties of a gravitational wormhole, yet is sufficiently small to implement
on today's quantum hardware," Caltech physicist Maria Spiropulu said in a
news release. Spiropulu, the Nature paper's senior author, is the principal
investigator for a federally funded research program known as Quantum
Communication Channels for Fundamental Physics.
Don't pack your bags for Alpha Centauri just yet:
This wormhole simulation is nothing more than a simulation, analogous to a
computer-generated black hole or supernova.
And physicists still don't see any conditions under
which a traversable wormhole could actually be created. Someone would have to
create negative energy first.
Columbia theoretical physicist Peter Woit warned against
making too much of a to-do over the research.
"The claim that 'Physicists Create a Wormhole'
is just complete bullshit, with the huge campaign to mislead the public about
this a disgrace, highly unhelpful for the credibility of physics research in
particular and science in general," he wrote on his blog, which is called
Not Even Wrong.
The main aim of the research was to shed light on a
concept known as quantum gravity, which seeks to unify the theories of general
relativity and quantum mechanics.
Those two theories have done an excellent job of
explaining how gravity works and how the subatomic world is structured,
respectively, but they don't match up well with each other.
One of the big questions focuses on whether wormhole
teleportation might follow the principles that are behind quantum entanglement.
That quantum phenomenon is better understood, and
it's even been demonstrated in the real world, thanks to Nobel-winning
research: It involves linking subatomic particles or other quantum systems in a
way that allows for what Albert Einstein called "spooky action at a
distance."
Spiropulu and her colleagues, including principal
authors Daniel Jafferis and Alexander Zlokapa, created a computer model that
applies the physics of quantum entanglement to wormhole dynamics.
Their program was based on a theoretical framework
known as the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model, or SYK.
The big challenge was that the program had to be
executed on a quantum computer. Google's Sycamore quantum processing chip was
just powerful enough to take on the task, with an assist from conventional
machine learning tools.
"We employed [machine] learning techniques to
find and prepare a simple SYK-like quantum system that could be encoded in the
current quantum architectures and that would preserve the gravitational
properties," Spiropulu said.
"In other words, we simplified the microscopic
description of the SYK quantum system and studied the resulting effective model
that we found on the quantum processor."
The researchers inserted a quantum bit, or qubit, of
encoded information into one of two entangled systems – and then watched the
information emerge from the other system. From their perspective, it was as if
the qubit passed between black holes through a wormhole.
"It took a really long time to arrive at the
results, and we surprised ourselves with the outcome," said Caltech
researcher Samantha Davis, one of the study's co-authors.
The team found that the wormhole simulation allowed
information to flow from one system to the other when the computerized
equivalent of negative energy was applied, but not when positive energy was
applied instead. That matches what theorists would expect from a real-world
wormhole.
As quantum circuits become more complex, the
researchers aim to conduct higher-fidelity simulations of wormhole behavior –
which could lead to new twists in fundamental theories.
"The relationship between quantum entanglement,
spacetime, and quantum gravity is one of the most important questions in
fundamental physics and an active area of theoretical research," Spiropulu
said.
"We are excited to take this small step toward
testing these ideas on quantum hardware and will keep going."
In addition to Jafferis, Zlokapa, Spiropulu and
Davis, the authors of the Nature paper, titled "Traversable WormholeDynamics on a Quantum Processor," include Joseph Lykken, David Kolchmeyer,
Nikolai Lauk, and Hartmut Neven.
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