Quantum Supremacy
How the Quantum Computer Revolution Will Change Everything
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4.4 • 48 Ratings
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • An exhilarating tour of humanity's next great technological achievement—quantum computing—which may supercharge artificial intelligence, solve some of humanity's biggest problems, like global warming, world hunger, and incurable disease, and eventually illuminate the deepest mysteries of science, by the bestselling author of The God Equation. • “Expertly describes and rectifies common misconceptions about quantum computing." —Science
"[Kaku's] lucid prose and thought process make abundant sense of this technological turning point.” —The New York Times Book Review
The runaway success of the microchip may finally be reaching its end. As shrinking transistors approach the size of atoms, the phenomenal growth of computational power inevitably collapses. But this change heralds the birth of a revolutionary new type of computer, one that calculates on atoms themselves.
Quantum computers promise unprecedented gains in computing power, enabling advancements that could overturn every aspect of our daily lives. While the media has mainly focused on their startling potential to crack any known encryption method, the race is already on to exploit their incredible power to revolutionize industry. Automotive makers, medical researchers, and consulting firms are all betting on quantum computing to design more efficient vehicles, create life-saving new drugs, and streamline businesses. But this is only the beginning. Quantum computing could be used to decode the complex chemical processes needed to produce cheap fertilizers and unleash a second Green Revolution; create a super battery that will enable the Solar Age; or design nuclear fusion reactors to generate clean, safe, renewable energy. It may even unravel the fiendishly difficult protein folding that lies at the heart of as-yet-incurable diseases like Alzheimer’s, ALS, and Parkinson’s. Already, quantum computers are being put to work to help solve the greatest mystery in science—the origin of the universe.
There is no single problem humanity faces that might not be addressed by quantum computers. With his signature clarity and enthusiasm, Dr. Michio Kaku, who has spent his entire professional life working on the quantum theory, tells the thrilling story of this exciting scientific frontier and the race to claim humanity’s future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this disappointing outing, theoretical physicist Kaku (The God Equation) argues that quantum computers (machines that compute on atoms rather than transistors) will transform the modern world. Quantum computers, he explains, are "100 trillion times faster than an ordinary supercomputer" because rather than relying on binary code, they process data based on the infinite ways that an atom's spin can occur in relation to a magnetic field, making them capable of complex computations that remain out of reach for digital computers. Despite Kaku's best efforts, readers will likely be left scratching their heads at the descriptions of how different models of quantum computing work, with one that involves "ion traps" in which atoms spin upward or downward and another that takes advantage of the polarization of light. Kaku's speculation on how quantum computing will help combat climate change, currently incurable diseases, the energy crisis, and world hunger doesn't say much about the technology; instead, he details the challenges each presents and concludes with the jejune conjecture that increased computing power might solve them. Difficult to grasp and carrying a whiff of ungrounded techno-utopianism, this is a rare misfire for Kaku.
Customer Reviews
A Good Overview of Quantum Computing
If you’re looking for deep detail on how quantum computing works, this would not be your book. However, this is a great book for covering applications of quantum computing and who the major players are in the field of quantum computing. Very enjoyable!
A Decent Primer
Michio Kaku’s “Quantum Supremacy” is a wonderful primer on all things quantum. Taking us through multiple fields of the sciences to establish building blocks of understanding in part one. He later builds up a frame of understanding in later parts on unified models and what makes the quantum model so hard to stabilize. Lastly, he finishes off this structure with broad strokes on the biggest challenges we face as a species and how the quantum computing era can solve them.
It’s Kaku’s deep dives into the practical and theoretical applications of quantum computing to solve long, perplexing problems that will draw most readers in. It’s his philosophical hope for how these machines ca. bring about a more vibrant future that will make most stay. Kaku is whimsical at times but generally adamant that the key to unlocking some of the universe’s greatest mysteries is ultimately the quantum computer. Making them the physicist’s equivalent to the philosopher’s stone.
Pragmatically, there are numerous impediments that remain in the way of achieving the quantum computing reality. Complex math problems, challenging constraints with superconductors, sustaining coherence, and so on. Luckily, will is not one of them. That surplus of spirit could be the existential concern that we all should worry about. The God like power that could be put into the hands of the most nefarious among us. This is a topic that Kaku completely passes over and hurts the book.
Especially given the recent turns against science funding and research in the US. That said, Kaku remains skillful at taking the very complex topic of Quantum Theory and distilling it down to digestible anecdotes for all audiences. Again, those nuggets of understanding are built carefully upon to bring every reader to a profound realization beyond quantum computing. This point being that Quantum Mechanics is the nexus point where almost all other fields of the science will converge as we make advances.