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The Life Scientific

Vlatko Vedral on the universe as quantum information

The Life Scientific

BBC

Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Science

4.6 • 1.4K Ratings

🗓️ 21 June 2022

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Vlatko Vedral describes himself as a quantum information practitioner, who believes that our universe is made up of quantum bits of information.

It is information, he tells Professor Jim Al-Khalili, rather than energy or matter, the traditional building blocks of classical Newtonian physics, that can help us to understand the nature of reality.

Vlatko is Professor of Quantum Information Science at the University of Oxford and the Principal Investigator at the Centre for Quantum Technologies at the National University of Singapore and he talks to Jim in front of an audience at the Cheltenham Science Festival.

At high school in Belgrade, in what was then Yugoslavia, young Vlatko was bowled over by the idea that you could take the micro-laws of quantum mechanics, and apply them to the complex systems of the macro world.

This drive to see the big picture, was fuelled when, as an undergraduate at Imperial College, London, he saw three words – “Information is physical” – the title of a paper by the IBM physicist, Rolf Landauer.

It was a light-bulb moment for Vlatko, who realised that the kind of information processing that the universe is capable of, depends on the underlying laws of physics.

This revelation led to Vlatko’s incarnation as a self-confessed “physics fundamentalist” who unashamedly crowns physics the Queen and other disciplines, her servants. It is physics alone, he tells Jim, which can answer the fundamental questions of the universe and discover the ultimate reality.

His PhD in 1997 at Imperial College, London, applied quantum mechanics, including super-positioning and entanglement (which Einstein famously called “spooky action at a distance”), to Claude Shannon’s Information theory, making Vlatko one of the pioneers in the field of quantum information.

As new quantum computers come on stream, he tells Jim, quantum information practitioners, like him, will have the capacity to simulate complex systems in the macroscopic domain.

Producer: Fiona Hill

Transcript

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0:00.0

Ever wondered what the world's wealthiest people did to get so ridiculously rich?

0:05.5

Our podcast Good Bad Billionaire takes one billionaire at a time and explains exactly how they made their money.

0:11.9

And then we decide if they are actually good, bad or just plain wealthy.

0:15.5

So if you want to know if Rihanna is as much of a bad guy as she claims,

0:19.2

or what Jeff Bezos really did to become the first person in history to pocket a hundred billion dollars,

0:24.6

listen to Good Bad Billionaire with me, Simon Jack, and me, Zingsing.

0:28.5

Listen, on BBC Sounds.

0:31.2

Hello, I'm Jim Elkelele, and this is the Life Scientific Podcast,

0:35.5

where I get to talk to some of the amazing men and women who are trying to understand our world

0:40.5

and make it a better place.

0:42.4

I explore their work and lives to find out what drives them.

0:46.2

And my guest today is Quantum Physicist, Vlad Kovedraal.

0:54.7

Hello, and a very warm welcome.

0:57.0

Both to my audience here at the Cheltenham Science Festival

1:00.2

and to all of you listening out there, wherever you are.

1:03.5

My guest today spends most of his time when he's not playing his guitar,

1:07.8

immersed in the wonderland of quantum physics,

1:11.1

asking the biggest questions about the nature of reality.

1:14.4

You know, the usual stuff. Why are we here? What does it all mean?

1:17.8

But it's a world where nothing, rather like Alice's wonderland, is as it seems.

1:23.6

He's Vlad Kovedraal and he's professor of quantum information theory

1:27.9

at the University of Oxford and at the Centre for Quantum Technologies

...

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