Arthur Hanson
Well-known member
Any thoughts or comments on this appreciated. Could this change even part of the game?
Breakthrough ‘physics shortcut’ solves quantum problems on ordinary laptop
A team of physicists from the University at Buffalo has developed a user-friendly method that allows researchers to solve complex quantum problems, once thought to require massive supercomputers, on an ordinary laptop.
The breakthrough extends a powerful “physics shortcut” and provides a practical template that could soon become a primary tool for exploring quantum dynamics.
The approach makes the computationally affordable method known as the truncated Wigner approximation (TWA) accessible for a much wider range of real-world problems.
“Our approach offers a significantly lower computational cost and a much simpler formulation of the dynamical equations,” said Dr. Jamir Marino, the study’s corresponding author and an assistant professor of physics in the UB College of Arts and Sciences.
“We think this method could, in the near future, become the primary tool for exploring these kinds of quantum dynamics on consumer-grade computers.”
Breakthrough ‘physics shortcut’ solves quantum problems on ordinary laptop
A team of physicists from the University at Buffalo has developed a user-friendly method that allows researchers to solve complex quantum problems, once thought to require massive supercomputers, on an ordinary laptop.
The breakthrough extends a powerful “physics shortcut” and provides a practical template that could soon become a primary tool for exploring quantum dynamics.
The approach makes the computationally affordable method known as the truncated Wigner approximation (TWA) accessible for a much wider range of real-world problems.
“Our approach offers a significantly lower computational cost and a much simpler formulation of the dynamical equations,” said Dr. Jamir Marino, the study’s corresponding author and an assistant professor of physics in the UB College of Arts and Sciences.
“We think this method could, in the near future, become the primary tool for exploring these kinds of quantum dynamics on consumer-grade computers.”
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