The updated version of the previous article.
Anyone watching the computer would see the
event as if time had turned backward. The researchers – from the Moscow
Institute of Physics and Technology and helped by colleagues in Switzerland and
the US – expect the technique to improve in time, becoming more reliable and
precise with time. Lead researcher Dr. Gordey Lesovik, who heads the Laboratory
of the Physics of Quantum Information at the Moscow Institute of Physics &
Technology (MIPT), said:
“We have artificially created a state that evolves in a direction opposite to that of the thermodynamic arrow of time.”
The "time machine" described in
the journal Scientific Reports consists of a rudimentary quantum computer made
up of electron "qubits". A qubit is a unit of information described
by a "one", a "zero", or a mixed "superposition"
of both states.
In the experiment, an "evolution
program" was launched which caused the qubits to become an increasingly
complex changing pattern of zeros and ones. During this process, the order was lost
– just as it is when the pool balls are struck and scattered with a cue. But
then another program modified the state of the quantum computer in such a way
that it evolved "backward", from chaos to order.
It meant the state of the qubits was rewound
back to its original starting point. Most laws of physics work both ways, in
the future and the past. If you see a video of a pool ball knocking into
another one, for instance, and then reverse that same video, the physical
processes would both make sense and it would be impossible at the level of
physics to know which way around would be correct.
But the universe does have one rule that goes only in one way: the second law of thermodynamics, which describes the progression from order to disorder. If you saw a video of someone breaking a perfectly arranged triangle of pool balls into a mess, for instance, then watching that backward would obviously look nonsensical.
The new experiment is like giving the pool
table such a perfectly calculated kick that the balls rolled back into an
orderly pyramid. The scientists found that working with just two qubits,
"time reversal" was achieved with a success rate of 85 percent. When
three qubits were involved more errors occurred, resulting in a 50 percent
success rate. The error rate is expected to drop as scientists improve the
devices used to be more sophisticated, the researchers behind the discovery
said.
The experiment could have a practical
application in the development of quantum computers, the scientists said.
"Our algorithm could be updated and used to test programmes written for quantum computers and eliminate noise and errors," said Dr Lesovik.
This article was originally published on the Independent.
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