Collector
Is Tim Palmer right about a 400-qubit wall? New quantum physics debate challenges irrational numbers, entanglement, and modern quantum computing | Collector
Is Tim Palmer right about a 400-qubit wall? New quantum physics debate challenges irrational numbers, entanglement, and modern quantum computing
Economic Times

Is Tim Palmer right about a 400-qubit wall? New quantum physics debate challenges irrational numbers, entanglement, and modern quantum computing

A new debate in quantum physics is shaking the foundations of modern science. Tim Palmerargues that nature may not follow continuous mathematics at all. His theory questions irrational numbers, wave functions, and even parts of Schrödinger equation. The claim also points to a possible 400-qubit ceiling in quantum computing. If true, quantum computers, entanglement theory, and the future of quantum mechanics may face hard physical limits, not just engineering problems.

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