Scientists have, for the first time, developed a quantum experiment that allows them to study the dynamics, or behavior, of a special kind of theoretical wormhole. The experiment has not created an actual wormhole (a rupture in space and time), rather it allows researchers to probe connections between theoretical wormholes and quantum physics, a prediction of so-called quantum gravity. Quantum gravity refers to a set of theories that seek to connect gravity with quantum physics, two fundamental and well-studied descriptions of nature that appear inherently incompatible with each other.
“We found a quantum system that exhibits
key properties of a gravitational wormhole yet is sufficiently small to
implement on today’s quantum hardware,” says Maria Spiropulu, the principal
investigator of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science research
program Quantum Communication Channels for Fundamental Physics (QCCFP) and the
Shang-Yi Ch’en Professor of Physics at Caltech. “This work constitutes a step
toward a larger program of testing quantum gravity physics using a quantum
computer. It does not substitute for direct probes of quantum gravity in the
same way as other planned experiments that might probe quantum gravity effects
in the future using quantum sensing, but it does offer a powerful testbed to
exercise ideas of quantum gravity.”
The research will be published December
1 in the journal Nature. The
study’s first authors are Daniel Jafferis of Harvard University and Alexander
Zlokapa (BS ’21), a former undergraduate student at Caltech who started on this
project for his bachelor’s thesis with Spiropulu and has since moved on to
graduate school at MIT.
Wormholes are bridges between two remote
regions in spacetime. They have not been observed experimentally, but
scientists have theorized about their existence and properties for close to 100
years. In 1935, Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen described wormholes as tunnels
through the fabric of spacetime in accordance with Einstein’s general theory of
relativity, which describes gravity as a curvature of spacetime. Researchers
call wormholes Einstein-Rosen bridges after the two physicists who invoked
them, while the term “wormhole” itself was coined by physicist John Wheeler in
the 1950s.
The notion that wormholes and quantum
physics, specifically entanglement (a phenomenon in which two particles can
remain connected across vast distances), may have a connection was first
proposed in theoretical research by Juan Maldacena and Leonard Susskind in
2013. The physicists speculated that wormholes (or “ER”) were equivalent to
entanglement (also known as “EPR” after Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky [PhD
’28], and Nathan Rosen, who first proposed the concept). In essence, this work
established a new kind of theoretical link between the worlds of gravity and
quantum physics. “It was a very daring and poetic idea,” says Spiropulu of the
ER = EPR work.
Later, in 2017, Jafferis, along with his
colleagues Ping Gao and Aron Wall, extended the ER = EPR idea to not just
wormholes but traversable wormholes. The scientists concocted a scenario in
which negative repulsive energy holds a wormhole open long enough for something
to pass through from one end to the other. The researchers showed that this
gravitational description of a traversable wormhole is equivalent to a process
known as quantum teleportation. In quantum teleportation, a protocol that has
been experimentally demonstrated over long distances via optical fiber and over
the air, information is transported across space using the principles of
quantum entanglement.
The present work explores the
equivalence of wormholes with quantum teleportation. The Caltech-led team
performed the first experiments that probe the idea that information traveling
from one point in space to another can be described in either the language of
gravity (the wormholes) or the language of quantum physics (quantum
entanglement).
A key finding that inspired possible
experiments occurred in 2015, when Caltech’s Alexei Kitaev, the Ronald and
Maxine Linde Professor of Theoretical Physics and Mathematics, showed that a
simple quantum system could exhibit the same duality later described by Gao,
Jafferis, and Wall, such that the model’s quantum dynamics are equivalent to
quantum gravity effects. This Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev, or SYK model (named after
Kitaev, and Subir Sachdev and Jinwu Ye, two other researchers who worked on its
development previously) led researchers to suggest that some theoretical
wormhole ideas could be studied more deeply by doing experiments on quantum
processors.
Furthering these ideas, in 2019,
Jafferis and Gao showed that by entangling two SYK models, researchers should
be able to perform wormhole teleportation and thus produce and measure the
dynamical properties expected of traversable wormholes.
In the new study, the team of physicists
performed this type of experiment for the first time. They used a “baby”
SYK-like model prepared to preserve gravitational properties, and they observed
the wormhole dynamics on a quantum device at Google, namely the Sycamore
quantum processor. To accomplish this, the team had to first reduce the SYK
model to a simplified form, a feat they achieved using machine learning tools
on conventional computers.
“We employed 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,” says Spiropulu. “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. It is curious and surprising how the
optimization on one characteristic of the model preserved the other metrics! We
have plans for more tests to get better insights on the model itself.”
In the experiment, the researchers
inserted a qubit — the quantum equivalent of a bit in conventional
silicon-based computers — into one of their SYK-like systems and observed the
information emerge from the other system. The information traveled from one quantum
system to the other via quantum teleportation — or, speaking in the
complementary language of gravity, the quantum information passed through the
traversable wormhole.
“We performed a kind of quantum
teleportation equivalent to a traversable wormhole in the gravity picture. To
do this, we had to simplify the quantum system to the smallest example that
preserves gravitational characteristics so we could implement it on the
Sycamore quantum processor at Google,” says Zlokapa.
Co-author Samantha Davis, a graduate
student at Caltech, adds, “It took a really long time to arrive at the results,
and we surprised ourselves with the outcome.”
“The near-term significance of this type
of experiment is that the gravitational perspective provides a simple way to
understand an otherwise mysterious many-particle quantum phenomenon,” says John
Preskill, the Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics at Caltech
and director of the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter (IQIM). “What
I found interesting about this new Google experiment is that, via machine
learning, they were able to make the system simple enough to simulate on an
existing quantum machine while retaining a reasonable caricature of what the
gravitation picture predicts.”
In the study, the physicists report
wormhole behavior expected both from the perspectives of gravity and from
quantum physics. For example, while quantum information can be transmitted
across the device, or teleported, in a variety of ways, the experimental
process was shown to be equivalent, at least in some ways, to what might happen
if information traveled through a wormhole. To do this, the team attempted to
“prop open the wormhole” using pulses of either negative repulsive energy pulse
or the opposite, positive energy. They observed key signatures of a traversable
wormhole only when the equivalent of negative energy was applied, which is
consistent with how wormholes are expected to behave.
“The high fidelity of the quantum
processor we used was essential,” says Spiropulu. “If the error rates were
higher by 50 percent, the signal would have been entirely obscured. If they
were half we would have 10 times the signal!”?
In the future, the researchers hope to
extend this work to more complex quantum circuits. Though bona fide quantum
computers may still be years away, the team plans to continue to perform
experiments of this nature on existing quantum computing platforms.
“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,” says Spiropulu. “We are excited to take this small step toward testing these ideas on quantum hardware and will keep going.”
Source:https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/physicists-observe-wormhole-dynamics-using-a-quantum-computer
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05424-3
Image: Artwork depicting a quantum
experiment that observes traversable wormhole behavior. Credit: inqnet/A.
Mueller (Caltech)
Source: Physicists
observe wormhole dynamics using a quantum computer – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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