Outreach Activity on
Talks
That's the story. Keys Aspects and Dilemmas of the Quantum Story
By
José Ignacio Latorre, ICCUB
Philip Ball
Date
Time
Language
CA
EN
Context
Host Institution
Web
Area
Atomic-Nuclear
Open to all (not free)
Despite this science still being in its infancy, humans are able to understand and manipulate material at the subatomic level and probe the origins and development of the universe. Scientific development provides the basis for introducing a new disruptive technology: quantum computing. The race to develop the first universal quantum computer is a silent battle that is taking place all over the world. Who will build it first? Will it be a country or a company? Can we protect the economy from the arrival of a machine able to decrypt all communications? The scientist and essayist Philip Ball, winner of the Physics World 2018 award, and Jose Ignacio Latorre, one of Spain’s leading quantum physicists, reveal the key aspects and dilemmas of the great quantum story after the screening of That’s the story.
That’s the story
María T. Soto-Sanfiel and Óscar Cusó / Spain, 2015, 53′, original version subtitled in Spanish
Professor Roy J. Glauber is the last surviving scientist from the theoretical division of the Manhattan Project, the laboratory in which the first nuclear weapons were developed during the Second World War. His clear, fluent and articulate narration tells us first-hand about life in Los Álamos, the character of the main scientists on the project, the first nuclear test, the bombing of Japan and the political consequences that followed. Glauber’s narration is documented with recently declassified film material from the Los Alamos archives.
KOSMOPOLIS FEST. K 19. The Quantum Story
Kosmopolis is a biennial literary event that has been held at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona since 2002, with two special editions (in 2005, Year of the Book and Reading, and in 2010, the Kosmopolis Special Day), and with a continuous programme that keeps the spirit of the festival alive all year round.
Stories that Move the World. Modernity has unfurled under the form of major stories that model the world. Postmodernity questions and fragments these, sparking cultural debates that define the end of the last century. And the new millennium finds us immersed in a landscape where all that is solid has not vanished into thin air, but into the minds and bodies of a beleaguered humanity.
There is a mixture of scales, measures, tenets, theories, dogmas, prescriptions and paradigms. Somewhere between the chance controlled by no one and the determinism that predicts everything, stands literature, in its most open conception, which reminds us of our condition of vulnerability and, at the same time, of the tools (private and shared) that we have at our disposal to criticise, modify or reinvent the stories that move the world.
The great story of quantum physics begins at the start of the last century and includes crucial milestones that run from the Copenhagen interpretation through the dawn of the atomic age and the emergence of the information society to the present and future of quantum computing. It is a story that has changed our perception of “reality”. It has profound geopolitical and economic implications, but it also poses a philosophical, ethical and literary challenge that will be decisive in coming decades.
Thursday 21
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Talk and screening: That's the story. Keys Aspects and Dilemmas of the Quantum Story, by Philip Ball i José Ignacio Latorre, 18.00 - 20.00, Theatre, 3 €
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Theatre: Dramatized Reading of Copenhagen, by Pere Arquillué, Rosa Renom, Lluís Marco. Directed by Ramon Simó, 21.15 - 22.45, Theatre, 7 €
Saturday 23
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Talk: Why Are Scriptwriters Obsessed with Physics?, by Víctor Sala, Joan Burdeus and Sonia Fernández-Vidal, 13.00 - 14.00, Theatre, 3 €
Sunday 24
- Lecture: Knocking on Heaven's Door: How physics scales the Universe, by Lisa Randall, 17.00 - 17.45, Hall, 3 €
More CCCB activities on March
Talk by Dava Sobel "The Glass Universe" Women Pioneers of Astronomy (9th March, 18h)
Related News & Activities
Guided visit to «Quantum»
Special visit for the Friends of the CCCB by the curators of the exhibition.
By
José Ignacio Latorre, ICCUB
Time
Talks
CCCB friends
Atomic-Nuclear
«Quàntica» at CCCB
Language
CA
On 9th April at 19:00 the exhibition «Quantum» will open at Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) until 24th September 2019. The exhibition counts on the scientific advice of José Ignacio Latorre, researcher at the ICCUB, as well as the intervention of different members and projects of this Institute.
ICCUB news
Atomic-Nuclear
Vocaciones STEM
Alba Cervera, researcher on Quantum Computing, participates in the conference “Mujer en la ciencia, el talento en las vocaciones STEM” to commemorate the International Day of Women and G
By
Alba Cervera, ICCUB
Time
Talks
Open to all
Atomic-Nuclear
Interview with J.I. Latorre in El Mundo
Interview with J. I.
Interview to
José Ignacio Latorre, ICCUB
Press
Atomic-Nuclear
Particle Physics
Related Material
Audios
Secció: José Ignacio Latorre & Mateo Valero
Resum
José Ignacio Latorre talks with Mateo Valero, one of the fathers of supercomputing, in the program Aquí, amb Josep Cuní on SER Radio.
Interview
Author
José Ignacio Latorre, ICCUB
Source
SER Catalunya
Language
CA
Atomic-Nuclear
Audios
Section J.I. Latorre with C. Abellan, CEO Quside. “La mecànica quàntica ens proporciona l'atzar absolut i profund i és fascinant”
Resum
Carlos Abellan, CEO from Quside start-up, have been invited to the Physics section of José Ignacio Latorre at the Show “Aquí, amb Josep Cuní” in SER Catalunya.
Interview/Discussion
Author
Several
Source
SER Catalunya
Language
CA
Atomic-Nuclear
Videos
La Era Cuántica. José Ignacio Latorre en conversación con Juliana Restrepo
Resum
RESUM:
Se nos ha dicho que el tictac de la Tierra es atómico, es un tictac cuántico, que hay presencia inadvertida de la cuántica en la vida cotidiana, en la manipulación informativa y en
Ceremonies, Conferences & Talks
Author
José Ignacio Latorre, ICCUB
Source
Parque Explora
Language
CA
Atomic-Nuclear
Particle Physics
Articles
Quantum Annealing
Resum
Abstract
An explanation of the quantum annealing, a future technology for solving optimization problems.
Article
Author
Alba Cervera, ICCUB
Source
Quantum World Association Medium
Language
EN
Atomic-Nuclear
Particle Physics