The Universe as Quantum Information
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Children Of Dune av Frank Herbert (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 271 krSeth Lloyd, New Scientist By turns irreverent, erudite and funny, Decoding Reality is - by the standard of books that require their readers to know what a logarithm is - a ripping good read...Not since David Deutsch's magestierial 'The Fabric of Reality' has a physicist given us such a wide-ranging and intriguing picture of how quantum mechanics constructs the world.
Science Well written and engaging, the book provides a constant flow of new ideas.
Steven Poole, The Guardian The author evinces great enthusiasm and curiosity throughout.
Seth Lloyd, New Scientist By turns irreverent, erudite and funny, Decoding Reality is...a ripping good read.
Seth Lloyd, New Scientist A wide-ranging and intriguing picture of how quantum mechanics constructs the world.
BBC Focus Magazine, Marcus Chown Excellent, thought-provoking book.
David Deutsch, author of The Fabric of Reality An engaging, non-technical exploration of what the new theory of quantum information and computation tells us about life, the universe, and everything.
Paul Davies, author of The Eerie Silence and The Goldilocks Enigma Let Vedral guide you skilfully through the wonderland of modern physics - where nothing is as it seems. This is the finest treatment I have read of the weird interplay of quantum reality, information and probability.
Sheldon Richmond, Science and Education Vedral's book goes to dizzying heights in answering the very big question: can one understand all of reality from a scientific point of view?
Vlatko Vedral studied undergraduate theoretical physics at Imperial College London, where he also received a PhD for his work on 'Quantum Information Theory of Entanglement'. Since June 2009, Vedral has held the position of Professor of Quantum Information Science at the University of Oxford. He also holds a professorship in Physics at the National University of Singapore. Throughout his career he has held a number of visiting professorships at different international institutions. He has published more than 170 research papers and has written two undergraduate textbooks. He has frequently written for popular science journals and major daily newspapers, as well as having done extensive radio programmes and television interviews.
Prologue 1: Creation Ex Nihilo: Something from Nothing 2: Information for all SeasonsPart One 3: Back to Basics: Bits and Pieces 4: Digital Romance: Life is a Four-Letter Word 5: Murphy's Law: I Knew this Would Happen to Me 6: Place Your Bets: In It to Win It 7: Social Informatics: Get Connected or Die Tryin'Part Two 8: Quantum Schmuntum: Lights, Camera, Action! 9: Surfing the Waves: Hyper-Fast Computers 10: Children of the Aimless Chance: Randomness versus DeterminismPart Three 11: Sand Reckoning: Whose Information is It, Anyway? 12: Destruction ab Toto: Nothing from Something Epilogue Notes Index