Quantum Biology: Current Status and Opportunities - Paul Davies Keynote

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • Workshop "Quantum Biology: Current Status and Opportunities"
    17 - 18 September 2012, University of Surrey, UK
    Evidence has recently emerged that plants use a form of quantum computing to calculate how best to direct energy through their photosynthetic apparatus. Scientists have also discovered that birds, insects and other animals appear to use entanglement (what Einstein called "spooky action at a distance" to detect the earth's magnetic field). And there is solid evidence that enzymes, those metabolic workhorses that drive much of the action in our cells, use the process known as quantum tunnelling to accelerate chemical reactions.
    The workshop sponsored by the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of Surrey, BBSRC (Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council) and MILES Programme at Surrey (Models and Mathematics in Life and Social Sciences) proved to be a great success and was attended by some of the leading researchers in this exciting new interdisciplinary field from across the world.
    As well as Surrey's own Professors, Jim Al-Khalili (a theretical physicist) and Johnjoe McFadden (a microbiologist), speakers included Paul Davies (Arizona), Vlatko Vedral (Oxford), Greg Engel (Chicago), Greg Scholes (Toronto), Thorsten Ritz (UC Irvine), Alexandra Olaya-Castro (UCL), Nigel Scrutton (Manchester) and Jennifer Brooks (Harvard). Topics covered included reports on recent experiments in biology and the latest theoretical calculations to model a range of biological processes.
    In bringing together such a diverse group of scientists, the workshop was hugely successful in sowing the seeds for future collaborations and potential funding opportunities for further research. Most importantly, it has established the work being carried out at Surrey on the international scene.
    A Workshop Report with programme is available here
    www.ias.surrey.ac.uk/workshops/quantumbiology/report.php
    In order to consolidate and grow local research interest in the field, the University of Surrey will be holding regular research seminars on quantum biology throughout the current academic year, funded by BBSRC, given by some of the leading researchers in the field.
    A dedicated Quantum Biology website featuring forthcoming events and news will be available soon. Please check Workshop Report page for updates.
    SPONSORS:
    Institute of Advanced Studies
    www.ias.surrey.ac.uk
    BBSRC
    www.bbsrc.ac.uk
    MILES
    www.miles.surey.ac.uk

Комментарии • 4

  • @bai2629
    @bai2629 8 лет назад +2

    Paul Davies has a superb blend of healthy skepticism, outside the box thinking, and professional competence. Asset to humanity without saying.

  • @rashmiranjannayak3251
    @rashmiranjannayak3251 4 года назад

    Good initiation at atomic scale to study the complex properties of cell biology. Really the study inhibits full of new expections of real life. Thanks for sharing.

  • @PetraKann
    @PetraKann 11 лет назад

    Superb

  • @NewZealandPakeha
    @NewZealandPakeha 3 года назад

    Hello
    Question
    Can you split the laser into quantum entangled pairs then broadcast one of the beams to a receiver / dish ect and the other beam through a boze-Einstein condensate.
    If quantum entanglement is true then once the basic signal is received even if has traveled 10 minutes through space it should be quantum entangled with the particle exiting the condensate.
    This then gives you one delayed quantum entangled particle entangled with another particle at a planetary distance.
    allowing quantum computing with Mars.🤪
    Ofcorse testing could be done in a lab.
    Put it on a rocket and test it at the space station.
    This is Jade Campbell
    NZ