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Monthly Archives: May 2021
A wobbling muon could unlock mysteries of the universe – Vox.com
Posted: May 14, 2021 at 6:23 am
Its an exciting time in particle physics. The results of a new experiment out of Fermilab in Illinois involving a subatomic particle wobbling weirdly could lead to new ways of understanding our universe.
To understand why physicists are so excited, consider the ambitious task theyve set for themselves: decoding the fundamental building blocks of everything in the universe. For decades, theyve been trying to do that by building a big, overarching theory known as the standard model.
The standard model is like a glossary, describing all the building blocks of the universe that weve found so far: subatomic particles like electrons, neutrinos, and quarks that make up everything around us, and three of the four fundamental forces (electromagnetic, weak, and strong) that hold things together.
But, as Jessica Esquivel, a particle physicist at Fermilab, tells Vox, scientists suspect this model is incomplete.
One of the big reasons why we know its incomplete is because of gravity. We know it exists because apples fall from trees and Im not floating off my seat, Esquivel says. But they havent yet found a fundamental particle that conveys gravitys force, so its not in the standard model.
Esquivel says the model also doesnt explain two of the biggest mysteries in the universe: dark matter, an elusive substance that holds galaxies together, and dark energy, an even more poorly understood force that is accelerating the universes expansion. And since the overwhelming majority of the universe might be made up of dark matter and dark energy, thats a pretty big oversight.
The problem is, the standard model works really well on its own. It describes the matter and energy were most familiar with, and how it all works together, superbly. Yet, as physicists have tried to expand the model to account for gravity, dark matter, and dark energy, theyve always come up short.
Thats why Esquivel and the many other particle physicists weve spoken to are so excited about the results of a new experiment at Fermilab. It involves muons subatomic particles that are like electrons heavier, less stable cousins. This experiment might, finally, have confirmed a crack in the standard model for particle physicists to explore. Its possible that crack could lead them to find new, fundamental building blocks of nature.
Esquivel worked on the experiment, so we asked her to walk us through it for the Unexplainable podcast. What follows is a transcript of that conversation, edited for clarity and length.
What was this muon experiment?
So at Fermilab, we can create particle beams of muons a very, very intense beam. You can imagine it like a laser beam of particles. And we shoot them into detectors. And then by taking a super, super close measurement of those muons, we can use that as kind of a probe into physics beyond our standard model.
So how, exactly, does this muon experiment point to a hole in the model, or to a new particle to fill that gap?
So the muon g-2 experiment is actually taking a very precise measurement of this thing that we call the precession frequency. And what that means is that we shoot a whole bunch of muons into a very, very precise magnetic field and we watch them dance.
They dance?
Yeah! When muons go into a magnetic field, they precess, or they spin like a spinning top.
One of the really weird quantum-y, sci-fi things that happens is that when you are in a vacuum or an empty space, it actually isnt empty. Its filled with this roiling, bubbling sea of virtual particles that just pop in and out of existence whenever they want, spontaneously. So when we shoot muons into this vacuum, there are not just muons going around our magnet. These virtual particles are popping in and out and changing how the muon wobbles.
Wait, sorry ... what exactly are these virtual particles popping in and out?
So, virtual particles, I ... see them as like ghosts of actual particles. We have photons that kind of pop in and out and theyre just kind of like there, but not really there. I think a really good depiction of this, the weirdness of quantum mechanics, is Ant-Man. Theres this scene where he shrinks down to the quantum realm, and he gets stuck and everything is kind of like wibbly-wobbling and somethings there, but its really not there.
Thats kind of like what virtual particles are. Its just hints of particles that were used to seeing. But theyre not actually there. They just pop in and out and mess with things.
So quantum mechanics says that there are virtual particles, sort of like ghosts of particles we already know about in our standard model, popping in and out of existence. And theyre bumping into muons and making them wobble?
Yes. But again, theoretical physicists know this, and theyve come up with a really good theory of how the muon will change with regards to which particles are popping in and out. So we know specifically how every single one of these particles interacts with each other and within the magnetic field, and they build their theories based on what we already know what is in the standard model.
Got it. So even though there are these virtual ghost particles popping in and out, as long as theyre versions of particles we know, then physicists can predict exactly how the muons are going to wobble. So were the predictions off?
So what we just unveiled is that precise measurement doesnt align with the theoretical predictions of how the muons are supposed to wobble in a magnetic field. It wobbled differently.
And the idea is that you have no idea whats making it do that extra wobble, so it might be something that hasnt been discovered yet? Something outside the standard model?
Yeah, exactly. Its not considered new physics yet because we as physicists give ourselves a very high bar to reach before we say something is potentially new physics. And thats 5 sigma [a measure of the probability that this finding wasnt a statistical error or a random accident.] And right now, were at 4.2 sigma. But its pretty exciting.
So if it clears that bar, would this break the standard model? Because Ive seen that framing in a bunch of headlines.
No, I dont think I would say the standard model is broken. I mean, weve known for a long time that its missing stuff. So its not that whats there doesnt work as its supposed to work.
Its just that were adding more stuff to the standard model, potentially. Just like back in the day when scientists were adding more elements to the periodic table ... even back then, they had spots where they knew an element should go, but they hadnt been able to see it yet. Thats essentially where were at now. We know we have the standard model, but were missing things. So we have holes that were trying to fill.
How exciting does all of this feel?
I think its like a career-defining moment. Its a once-in-a-lifetime. Were chasing new physics and were so close, we can taste it.
What Im studying isnt in any textbook that Ive read or peeked through before, and the fact that the work that Im doing could potentially be in textbooks in the future ... that people can be learning about the dark matter particle that g-2 had a role in finding ... it gives me chills just thinking about it!
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A wobbling muon could unlock mysteries of the universe - Vox.com
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Quantum science, particle physics and nanoscale motors awarded support from Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Tech Fund – Princeton University
Posted: at 6:23 am
New quantum materials that promise to propel the communications of the future, an AI-driven search to uncover the fundamental laws of physics, and a project to build biomolecular motors have been selected for funding through the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund.
The three projects, led by faculty teams from across the sciences and engineering, aim to pioneer new discoveries with the potential to transform entire fields of inquiry and propel innovation. The projects were selected following a competitive application process in which proposals were evaluated for their potential to accelerate progress on substantial challenges through strides in the development of knowledge and technological capabilities.
These are profoundly significant projects that have the potential to take both our fundamental knowledge and technical capabilities to new, exciting levels, said Dean for Research Pablo Debenedetti, the Class of 1950 Professor in Engineering and Applied Science and a professor of chemical and biological engineering."Rather than iterate, these proposals aim to make major advances in a discipline, and have the capacity to shift the conversation entirely."
The Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund spurs the exploration of ideas and approaches that can profoundly enable progress in science or engineering.Eric Schmidt, the former chief executive officer of Google and former executive chairman of Alphabet Inc., Googles parent company, earned his bachelors degree in electrical engineering from Princeton in 1976 and served as a Princeton trustee from 2004 to 2008. He and his wife, Wendy, a businesswoman and philanthropist, created the fund in 2009. Including this years three awards, the fund has supported 27 research projects at Princeton.
From left: Peter Elmer, senior research physicist, physics; Mariangela Lisanti, associate professor of physics; and Isobel Ojalvo, assistant professor of physics
Photo of Elmer by Luisella Giulicchi; photos of Lisanti and Ojalvo by Richard Soden
Embarking on a quest to explore the fundamental mysteries of the universe, a team of physicists will bring the power of artificial intelligence (AI) to the exploration of the subatomic building blocks of matter.
Despite major strides in understanding the physical laws that govern the universe, many open questions remain, including the nature of dark matter and dark energy, which together make up 95% of the universe. A team led by Senior Research Physicist Peter Elmer, Associate Professor of Physics Mariangela Lisanti and Assistant Professor of Physics Isobel Ojalvo will develop methods for applying AI as a tool for searching for new physical phenomena in experiments conducted at particle accelerators such as CERNs Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
Experiments at the LHC have validated the leading theory of the universes makeup, the Standard Model, by confirming theoretical predictions such as the existence of the Higgs particle. Yet, these findings fail to address unsolved questions inadequately explained by the Standard Model, including dark matter, dark energy and the mass of the neutrino. New theories are needed but how does one conduct a search for new principles of physics when one doesnt know what to look for?
AI can assist in this quest by searching through the massive amount of data resulting from particle collision experiments for novel or unexpected results. The team will develop AI-driven algorithms that search for anomalies in the data that hint at new phenomena. Through the training and deployment of AI software, the team will evaluate particle-collision data to look for new physical laws that may explain the unexplained facets of our universe.
From left: Sanfeng Wu, assistant professor of physics; Leslie Schoop, assistant professor of chemistry; Mansour Shayegan, professor of electrical and computer engineering (ECE); and Loren Pfeiffer, senior research scholar in ECE
Photos (from left) by Richard Soden; Todd Reichart; courtesy department of ECE; and David Kelly Crow
Drawing on recent discoveries in quantum materials, a team from the departments of physics, chemistry, and electrical and computer engineering will build a new site for quantum exploration that features some of the most extreme conditions on Earth including ultra-low temperatures, ultra-low and ultra-high pressures, and strong magnetic fields.
Technologies that utilize quantum properties could unlock new capabilities in computing, communicationsand many other areas. Whereas much research has focused on exotic quantum properties in metals and semi-metals, few studies have looked for quantum behaviors in electrical insulators materials in which electrons cannot move freely primarily due to the lack of methods for observing these properties in insulators. Recent work by teams at Princeton have detected intriguing examples of quantum phases in insulators and semi-conductors, but exploring quantum behaviors in these systems requires specialized conditions and new experimental approaches.
To make transformative discoveries in the emerging area of quantum insulators, a team led by Assistant Professor of Physics Sanfeng Wu, Assistant Professor of Chemistry Leslie Schoop, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Mansour Shayegan, and Senior Research Scholar in Electrical and Computer Engineering Loren Pfeiffer will build an experimental research facility in Princetons Jadwin Hall called Station X.
The station will house equipment with which to create extreme temperatures, pressures, magnetic fields, materials purityand other conditions that enable the researchers to evaluate materials with hidden quantum phases. The team will develop advanced measurement systems that combine electronics and optics to provide an unprecedented platform that can explore the synthesis and measurements of a wide range of quantum materials. This project, combining Princetons expertise in chemistry, engineering and physics, will ensure a leading role for Princeton in the emergence of new areas of quantum science.
From left: Sabine Petry,associate professor of molecular biology; Akanksha Thawani, a 2020 Ph.D. graduate in chemical and biological engineering; and Howard Stone, Donald R. Dixon '69 and Elizabeth W. Dixon Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Inspired by the bodys own biological machinery, a team of molecular biologists and mechanical engineers will design tiny motors and perhaps eventually entire factories dedicated to treating diseases.
The technology for building these molecular robotics draws on recent discoveries at Princeton about the nature of the cells skeleton, which consists of long, thin proteins known as microtubules. Nature is adept at constructing devices with moving microtubules that perform work such as propelling movement of single-celled organisms or dividing chromosomes within cells. One such device, the mitotic spindle, consists of microtubule strands that attach to chromosomes and pull them apart during cell division. Microtubules can exert force on other molecules by pulling or pushing against them, they can separate molecules or propel them together, and they can self-assemble into new structures.
Princeton researchers led by Associate Professor of Molecular Biology Sabine Petry have discovered how spindles form and have uncovered molecular mechanisms by which to control them. Petry will team with Howard Stone, the Donald R. Dixon '69 and Elizabeth W. Dixon Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, whose expertise in fluid mechanics will help build miniature channels and chips, in which the microtubule-based machines will be assembled.
The team has laid plans to build several types of microtubule-based nanoscale devices, including bio-actuators, which are capable of performing a task such as moving a particle or molecule from one place to another. By connecting microtubule-based machines via channels, guided by fluid streams into certain directions, the researchers will create nanosized assembly lines and potentially eventually factories. The researchers envision this microtubule-based nanotechnology as opening up an entirely new field of science, making complex manipulations of molecules and other small structures possible at the nanoscale.
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Quantum Computing In Finance Where We Stand And Where We Could Go – Science 2.0
Posted: at 6:23 am
Quantum computers(QCs) operate totally differently than classical computers. Due to the quantumeffects known as superposition and entanglement, quantum bits (called qubits) cantake on non-binary states represented by complex numbers. This facilitatescomputational solutions to mathematical problems that cannot be solved byclassical computers because they require sequentially computing an astronomicalnumber of combinations or permutations.
This ability of QCsmean that they particularly excel at optimization problems, where the optimalcombination is only found after trying out an enormous number of possiblecombinations. Several important problems in finance are in essence optimizationproblems which meet this description. The portfolio-optimization problem infinance is one good example of such a problem. Asset pricing, credit-scoring,and Monte Carlo-type risk analysis are other examples. For example, it isestimated that running a risk assessment of a large portfolio which needs to bedone overnight or can even take days with classical computers, could one day bedone in real-time by a full-scale QC. That explains the keen interest of thefinance industry in quantum solutions.
The calculatingpower of a QC grows exponentially with the number of qubits. Quantum-computingroadmaps cite the number of qubits or competing metrics to indicate the risingpower of these machines, with some setting thresholds for so-called quantum supremacy,the point at which QCs will surpass classical supercomputers. But there arestill enormous technical challenges to solve before at-scale QCs can becommercialized, most notably the challenges of stability and error correction.
However, quantum-inspiredsoftware which is software running on classical computers but based on novelalgorithms that reframe mathematical problems in terms of quantum principles is already here. Several quantum-inspired solutions are currently focused onportfolio-optimization problems, and seem well positioned for their near-futureadoption by the financial asset-management industry.
Even thelimited-size, noisy QCs currently available lend themselves toportfolio-optimization solutions. Early proofs-of-concept (POCs) of hybrid orfull quantum solutions to asset-portfolio optimizations such as stock selectionhave already been demonstrated with encouraging results. Many of the largestnames in finance are already investing in quantum, or at least partnering withtechnology providers to explore finance applications. Financial servicescompanies who wait too long to gain experience in the field run the risk ofgetting left behind.
Quantum computing exploits quantum mechanics, the propertiesand behavior of fundamental particles at the subatomic level, as predicted byour best current understanding of quantum physics. The goal of quantumcomputing is to build hardware and develop suitable algorithms that processinformation in ways that are superior to so-called classical computers, i.e.the ubiquitous digital computers that the Information Age was built on.
The essential elements of a QC were postulated in the early1980s, but of late work in this area has accelerated with several largeestablished companies and start-ups building quantum-computing hardware. Aneven larger ecosystem of software platforms and solution providers exist aroundthe hardware providers. Collaboration models such as alliances and partnershipsare common. Many universities are involved, while governments are alsosupporting quantum-computing research.
Typical of a new industry, standards and metrics are stillin flux, and competing architectures, which leverage different mechanisms andimplementations of quantum principles, vie for technical supremacy andinvestment dollars. Announcements of new breakthroughs are made almost daily,which makes it important to distinguish the hype from real progress.
This paper attempts to demystify the technology, byexplaining the basic principles of quantum computing and the competingtechnologies vying for quantum supremacy. An overview of the current quantumcomputing industry and the main players is provided, as well as a look at thefirst applications and the different industries that could benefit. The focusthen turns to the finance industry, with an overview of the most importantcomputational problems in finance that lends themselves to quantum computing,with a deeper dive into portfolio optimization. Notable recent case studies andtheir participants are reviewed. The paper concludes with an assessment of thecurrent state of quantum computing and the business impact that can be expectedin the short and medium term.
What we now call classical(or conventional) digital computers perform all theircalculations in an aggregate of individual bits that are either 0 or 1 invalue, because they are implemented by transistors that are each eitherswitched completely on or off. This is called binary logic,which is the essence of any digital computer, and implemented in a longstandingcomputer-science paradigm originating with Turing and Von Neumann. Conventionalcomputers operate by switching billions of little transistors on and off, withall state changes governed by the computers clock cycle. With n transistors,there are 2n possible states for the computer to be in at any giventime. Importantly, the computer can only be in one of these states at a time. Digital computers are highly complexwith typical computer chips holding 20x1019 bits, yet incrediblyreliable at the semiconductor level with fewer than one error in 1024operations. (Software and mechanical-related errors are far more common incomputers.)
Analog computersprecede digital computers. In contrast to digital computers, classical analogcomputers perform calculations with electrical parameters (voltage or current)that take a full range of values along a continuous linear scale. Analogcomputers do not necessarily need to be electrical they can be mechanicaltoo, such as the first ones built by the ancient Greeks but the most sophisticated ones from the 20th century ones wereelectrical. Unlike digital computers, analog computers do not need a clock cycle,and all values change continuously. Before the digital revolution was enabledthrough the mass integration of transistors on chips, analog computers wereused in several applications, for example, to calculate flight trajectories orin early autopilot systems. But since the 1960s analog computers have largelyfallen into disuse due to the dominance of digital computers over the last fewdecades.
Both classical digital and analog computers are at theircore electrical devices, in the sense that they perform logic operations thatare reflected by the electrical state of devices, typically semiconductordevices such as transistors (or vacuum tubes for mid-20th centuryanalog computers), which comes about because of voltage differences and currentflow. Current flow is physically manifested in terms of the flow of electrons in an electricalcircuit.
Quantum computers(QCs), on the other hand, directly exploit the strange and counterintuitivebehavior of sub-atomic particles (electrons, nuclei or photons) as predicted byquantum theory to implement a new type of mathematics. In a QC, quantum bitscalled qubits can be measured as|0> or |1>, which are the quantum equivalents of the binary 0 and 1 inclassical computers. However, due to a quantum property called superposition, qubits can be non-binaryin a superposition state and interact with one another in that state duringprocessing. It is this special property that allows QCs to theoretically offerexponentially more processing power than classical computers in someapplications. Once the processing is complete, the result can only be measuredin the binary states, |0> or |1>, because superpositioning is alwayscollapsed by the measurement process.
Because of another curious quantum property called entanglement, the behavior of two ormore quantum objects is correlated even if they are physically separated.According to the laws of quantum mechanics, this pattern is consistent whethera millimeter or kilometer or an astronomical distance separates them.While one qubit is situated in a superposition between two basis states, 10qubits utilizing entanglement, could be in a superposition of 1,024 basisstates.
Unlike the linearity of classical computers, the calculatingpower of a QC grows exponentially with the number of qubits. It is this abilitythat gives QCs the extraordinary power of processing a huge number of possibleoutcomes simultaneously. When in the unobserved state of superposition, nqubits can contain the same amount of information as 2n classicalbits. So, four qubits are equivalent to 16 classical bits, which might notsound like a big improvement. But 16 qubits are equivalent to 85,536 classicalbits, and 300 qubits can contain more states than all the atoms estimated to bein the universe. That is not only an astronomical number; it is beyondastronomical. This exponential effect is why there is so much hope for thefuture of quantum computing. With single- or double-digit numbers of qubits,the advantage over classical computing is not immediately clear, but the powerof quantum computing scales exponentially beyond that in ways that are trulyhard to imagine. This explains why there is so much anticipation about thetechnology exploding once a certain number of qubits have been reached in areliable QC.
However, to reliably encode information and expect it to bereturned upon measurement, there are only two acceptable states for a qubit: 0and 1.This means a qubit can only store 1 bit of information at a time. Even withmany qubits, the scaling of information storage doesn't improve beyond whatyou'd get classically: ten qubits can store 10 bits of information and onethousand qubits can store 1,000 bits. Because a qubit can only be measured in one of these two states,qubits cannot store any more data than conventional computer bits. There isthus no quantum advantage in data storage. The advantage is in informationprocessing, and that advantage comes from the special quantum properties of aqubit that it can occupy asuperposition of states when not being measured.
Another point to keep in mind is that due to probabilisticwaveform properties of qubits, QCs do not typically deliver one answer, butrather a narrow range of possible answers. Multiple runs of the samecalculation can further narrow the range, but at the expense of lessening speedgains.
Classical computers will not be replaced by QCs. A primaryreason for this is that QCs cannot run the if/then/else logic functions thatare a cornerstone of the classical Von Neumann computer architecture. InsteadQCs will be used alongside classical computers to solve those problems thatthey are particularly good at, such as optimization problems.
The strengths of QCs in simultaneous calculations mean thatthey excel at finding optimal solutions to problems with a large number ofvariables, where the optimal combination is only found after trying out anenormous number of possible combinations or permutations. Such problems arefound, for example, in optimizing any portfolio composition, or trying outmillions of possible new molecular combinations for drugs, or in routing manyaircraft between many hubs. In such problems there are typically 2npossibilities and they all have to be tried out to find an optimal solution. Ifthere are 100 elements to combine, it becomes a 2100 computation,which is almost impossible to solve with a classical computer but a 100-qubitcomputer could solve it in one operation.
Quite a few hard problems in finance are in essenceoptimization problems and therefore meet the description of problems that canbe solved by QCs. The portfolio-optimization problem in finance is one goodexample of such a problem. Asset pricing, credit-scoring, and Monte Carlo-typerisk analysis are other examples. That explains the keen interest of thefinance industry in quantum solutions. The finance industry is also wellpositioned to be an early adopter, because financial algorithms are muchquicker to deploy than algorithms that drive industrial or other physicalprocesses.
A QC architecture can be seen as a stack with the followingtypical layers:
At the bottom is the actual quantum hardware (usually held at near-absolute zero temperaturesto minimize thermal noise, and/or in a vacuum)
The next level up comprises the control systems that regulate thequantum hardware and enable the calculation
Above those comes the software layer that implements the algorithms (and in future, alsowill do the error correction). It includes a quantum-classical interface thatcompiles source code into executable programs
The top of the stack comprises the wider varietyof services to utilize the QC, e.g. the operatingsystems and software platformsthat help translate real-life problems into a format suitable for quantumcomputing
There are many different ways to physically realize qubitsfrom using trapped calcium ions to superconducting structures.In each case, quantum states are being manipulated to perform calculations.Quantum computers can entangle qubits by passing them through quantum logic gates. For example, aCNOT (conditional NOT) gate flipsor doesnt flipa qubit based on the stateof another qubit. Stringing multiple quantum logic gates together creates a quantum circuit.
The designers of QCs need to master and control both superposition and entanglement:
Without superposition, qubits wouldbehave like classical bits, and would not be in the multiple states that allowquantum programmers to run the equivalent of many calculations at once. Withoutentanglement, the qubits would sit in superposition without generatingadditional insight by interacting. No calculation would take place because thestate of each qubit would remain independent from the others. The key tocreating business value from qubits is to manage superposition and entanglementeffectively.[i]
The simplest and most typical physical properties that canserve as a qubit is the electrons internal angular momentum, spin for short. It has the quantumproperty of having only two possible projections on any coordinate axis, +1/2or -1/2 in units of the Planck constant. For any chosen axis the two basicquantum states of the electrons spin can be denoted as (up) or (down). Butthese are not the only states possible for a quantum bit, because the spinstate of an electron is described by a quantum-mechanical wave function. Thatfunction includes two complexnumbers, called quantum amplitudes, and , each with its own magnitude. The rules of quantum mechanics dictate thatQUOTE 162+2=1"> 162+2=1"> . Both and have real and imaginaryparts. The squared magnitudes 2 and 2 correspond to theprobabilities of the spin of the electron to be in the basic states or whenthey are measured. Since those are the only two outcomes possible, their squaredmagnitudes must equal 1. In contrast to a classical bit, which can only be inone of its two binary states, a qubit can be in any continuum of possiblestates, as defined by the quantum amplitudes and . In the popular press thisis often explained by the oversimplified, and somewhat mystical, statement thata qubit can exist simultaneously in both its or states. That is analogousto saying that a plane flying northwest is simultaneously flying both west andnorth, which is not incorrect strictly speaking, but not a particularly helpfulmental model either.
Because a qubit can only be measured in one of these two states, qubits cannot store any moredata than conventional computer bits. There is thus no quantum advantage indata storage. The advantage is in information processing, and that advantagecomes from the special quantum properties of a qubit meaning it can occupy asuperposition of states when not being measured. During computation, qubits caninteract with one another while in their superposition state. For example, aset of 6 qubits can occupy any linear combination of all the 26 = 64different length 6-bit strings. With 64 continuous variables describing thisstate, the space of configurations available to a QC during a calculation is muchgreater than a classical one. The measurement limitations of storinginformation do not apply during the runtime execution of a quantum algorithm:During processing every qubit in a quantum algorithm can occupy asuperposition. Thus, in a superposition state, every possible bit string (inthis example, 26 = 64 different strings)) can be combined. Each bitstring in the superposition has an independent complex number coefficient witha magnitude (A) and a phase ():
i = Aieii
A modern digital computer, with billions of transistors inits processors, typically has 64 bits, not 6 as in our quantum example above.This allows it to consider 64 bits at once, which allows for 264states. While 264 is a large number, equal to approximately 2 x 1019,quantum computing can offer much more. The spaceof continuous states of QCs is much larger than the space of classical bitstates. That is because the possibility of many particles interacting at thequantum level to form a common wave function, allowing changes in one particleto affect all others instantaneously and in a well-ordered manner. That is akinto massive parallel computing, which can beat classical multicore systems.
Quantum computing operations can mostly be handled accordingto the standard rules of linear algebra, in particular matrix multiplication. The quantum state is represented by a state vectorwritten in matrix form, and the gates in the quantum circuit (whereby the calculations are executed) arerepresented as matrices too. Multiplying a state vector by a gate matrix yieldsanother state vector. Recent progress has been made to use quantum algorithmsto crack non-linear equations, by using techniques that disguise non-linearsystems as linear ones.[ii]
The possibility of quantum computing was raised by Caltechphysicist, Richard Feynman, in 1981. The person considered by most to be thefounder of quantum computing, David Deutsch, first defined a QC in a seminalpaper in 1985.[iii]
In 1994, a Bell Labs mathematician, Peter Shor, developed aquantum computing algorithm that can efficiently decompose any integer numberinto its prime factors.[iv]It has since become known as the Shoralgorithm and has great significance for quantum computing. Shorsalgorithm was a purely theoretical exercise at the time, but it anticipatedthat a hypothetical QC could one day solve NP-hard problems of the type used asthe basis for modern cryptography. Shors algorithm relies on the specialproperties of a quantum machine. While the most efficient classical factoringalgorithm, known as the general number field sieve, uses an exponential function of a constant x d1/3to factor an integer with d digits; Shors algorithm can do that byexecuting a runtime function that is only a polynomialfunction, namely a constant x d3. Accordingly, classicalcomputers are limited to factoring integers with only a few hundred digits,which is why using integers in the thousands in cryptography keys is consideredto make for practically unbreakable codes. But a QC using the Kitaev version ofShors algorithm only needs 10d qubits, and will have a runtime roughly equalto d3.[v]
In summary, the Shor algorithm means that a QC can solve anNP-hard mathematical problem in polynomial time that classical computers canonly solve in exponential time.Therefore, Shors algorithm can demonstrate by how much quantum computing canimprove processing time over classical computing. While a full-scale QC withthe thousands of qubits needed to employ Shors algorithm in practice to crackcodes is not yet available, many players are working towards machines of thatsize.
Another important early QC algorithm is Grovers algorithm, a search algorithm which finds a particularregister in an unordered database. This problem can be visualized as aphonebook with N names arranged in completely random order. In order to findsomeone's phone number with a probability of , any classical algorithm(whether deterministic or probabilistic) will need to look at a minimum of N/2names. But the quantum algorithm needs only QUOTE 16ON"> 16ON"> steps.[vi]This algorithm can also be adapted for optimization problems.
Most quantum calculations are performed in what is called a quantum circuit. The quantum circuit isa series of quantum gates thatoperate on a system of qubits. Each quantum gate has inputs and outputs andoperates akin to the hardware logic gates in classical digital computers. Likedigital logic gates, the quantum gates are connected sequentially to implementquantum algorithms.
Quantum algorithmsare algorithms that run on QCs, and which are structured to use the uniqueproperties of quantum mechanics, such as superposition or quantum entanglement,to solve particular problem statements. Major quantum algorithms include thequantum evolutionary algorithm (QEA), the quantum particle swarm optimizationalgorithm (QPSO), the quantum annealing algorithm (QAA), the quantum neuralnetwork (QNN), the quantum Bayesian network (QBN), the quantum wavelettransform (QWT), and the quantum clustering algorithm (QC).[vii]A comprehensive catalog of quantum algorithms can be found online in the Quantum Algorithm Zoo.[viii]
Quantum softwareis the umbrella term used to describe the full collection of QC instructions,from hardware-related code, to compilers, to circuits, all algorithms andworkflow software.
Quantum annealingis an alternative model to circuit-based algorithms, as it is not built up outof gates. Quantum annealing naturally returns low-energy solutions by utilizinga fundamental law of physics that any system will tend to seek its minimumstate. In the case of optimization problems, quantum annealing uses quantumphysics to find the minimum energy state of the problem, which equates to theoptimal or near-optimal combination ofits constituent elements.[ix]
An Ising machineis a non-circuit alternative that works for optimization problems specifically.In the Ising model, the energy from interactions between the spins of everypair of electrons in a collection of atoms is summed. Since the amount of energydepends on whether spins are aligned or not, the total energy of the collectiondepends on the direction in which each spin in the system points. The generalIsing optimization problem is determining in which state the spins should be sothat the total energy of the system is minimized. To use the Ising model foroptimization requires mapping parameters of the original optimization problem,such as an optimal route for the TravelingSalesman,into a representative set of spins, and to define how the spins influence oneanother.[x]
Hybrid computingtypically entails transferring the problem (say optimization) into a quantumalgorithm, of which the first iteration is run on a QC. This provides a veryfast answer, but only a rough assessment of the valid total solution space. Therefined answer is then found with a powerful classical computer, which only hasto examine a subset of the original solution space.[xi]
The Achilles heel of the QC is the loss of coherence, or decoherence, caused by mechanical(vibration), thermal (temperature fluctuations), or electromagnetic disturbanceof the subatomic particles used as qubits. Until the technology improves,various workarounds are needed. Commonly algorithms are designed to reduce thenumber of gates in an attempt to finish execution before decoherence and othersources of errors can corrupt the results.[xii]This often entails a hybrid computing scheme which moves as much work aspossible from the QC to classical computers.
Current guestimates by experts are that truly useful QCswould need to be between 1,000 and 100,000 qubits. However, quantum-computingskeptics such as Mikhail Dyakonov, a noted quantum physicist, point out thatthe enormous number of continuous parameters that would describe the state of auseful QC might also be its Achilles heel. Taking the low end of a 1,000 qubitsmachine, would imply a QC with 21,000 parameters describing itsstate at any moment. That is roughly 10300, a number greater thanthe number of subatomic particles in the universe: A useful QC needs toprocess a set of continuous parameters that is larger than the number ofsubatomic particles in the observable universe.[xiii]How would error control be done for 10300 continuous parameters?According to quantum-computing theorists the threshold theorem proves that it can be done. Their argument isthat once the error per qubit per quantum gate is below a certain thresholdvalue, indefinitely long quantum computation becomes possible, at a cost ofsubstantially increasing the number of qubits needed. The extra qubits areneeded to handle errors by forming logical qubits using multiple physical qubits.(This is a bit like error correction in current telecom systems, which useextra bits to validate data.) But that greatly increases the number of physicalqubits to handle, which as we have seen, are already more than astronomical. Atthe very least, this brings into perspective the magnitude of the technologicalproblems that scientists and engineers will have to overcome.
To put the comparative size of the QC error-correctionproblem in practical terms: For a typical 3-Volt CMOS logic circuit used inclassical digital computers, a binary 0 would be any voltage measured between0V and 1V, while a binary 1 would be any voltage measured between 2V and 3V.Thus when e.g. 0.5V of noise is added to the signal for binary 0, themeasurement would be 0.5V which would still correctly indicate a binary valueof 0. For this reason, digital computers are very robust to noise. However, fora typical qubit, the difference in energy between a zero and a one is just 10-24Joulesone ten-trillionth as much energy as an X-ray photon. Error correctionis one of the biggest hurdles to overcome in quantum computing, the concernbeing that it will impose such a huge overhead, in terms of auxiliarycalculations, that it will make it very hard to scale QCs.
After Dyakonov published the skeptics viewpoint two yearsago, a vigorous debate followed.[xiv]A typical response to the skeptics case comes from an industry-insider,Richard Versluis, systems architect at QuTech, a Dutch QC collaboration.Versluis acknowledges the engineering challenges to control a QC and to makesure its state is not affected. However, he states that the challenge is tomake sure that the control signals and qubits perform as desired. Major sourcesof potential errors are quantum rotationsthat are not perfectly accurate, and decoherenceas qubits lose their entanglement and the information they contain. Versluisgoes on to define a five-layered QC architecture that he believes will be up tothe task. From top to bottom, the layers are 1. Application layer, 2. Classicalprocessing, 3. Digital processing, 4. Analog processing, and 5. Quantumprocessing. Together the digital-, analog-, and quantum-processing layerscomprise the quantum processing unit (QPU). But Versluis also has toacknowledge that quantum error correction could solve the fundamental problemof decoherence only at the expense of 100 to 10,000 error-correcting physicalqubits per logical (calculating) qubit. Furthermore, each of these millions ofqubits will need to be controlled by continuous analog signals. And the biggestchallenge of all is doing the thousands of measurements per second in a waythat they do not disturb quantum information (which must remain unknown untilthe end of the calculation), while catching and correcting errors. The currentparadigm of measuring all qubits with analog signals will not scale up tolarger machines, and a major advance in the technology will be required.[xv]
Most experts agree that we will have to live with QCs overthe next few years that will have high levels of errors that go uncorrected.There is even an accepted industry term and acronym for such QCs: NISQ (Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum)devices. The NISQ era is expected to last for the next five years at least, barany major breakthroughs that might shorten that timeline.
Once critical technical breakthroughs are made, QC adoptionmay happen faster than expected due to the prevalence of cloud computing.Making QC services easily accessible over the cloud speeds both adoption andlearning. It has the added advantage that it forces hardware makers to focus onbuilding QCs with a high percentage of uptime, so as to ensure continuedavailability over the cloud.
Most QC makers already offer cloud access to their latestQCs. There are programming environments softwaredevelopment kits (SDKs) that facilitate the building of quantum circuits available over the cloud for QC programmers to learn how to write the softwarethat unleashes the magic of quantum computing, and to experiment with it. Asmore functionality is added to the hardware, these SDKs are continually updated.
The implication is that a whole ecosystem is being broughtup to speed on how to make the best use of a quantum capability that does notquite exist yet. An analogy would be having had flight simulators to trainfuture pilots while the Wright brothers were still figuring out how to keeptheir plane in the air for more than a few hundred feet. The upside of thisapproach is that any real advances in making reliable QCs with capabilitiessuperior to classical computers will be very quickly exploited by real-worldapplications. This situation is in contrast to most major technologicalbreakthroughs we have seen in the past. For example, it took a generation ortwo for industrial engineers to learn how to properly use electrical power inthe place of steam power in factories. More recently, it took a generation tofully exploit the capabilities of digital computing in business and elsewhere.But in the case of quantum computing, all the knowledge building inanticipation of a successful QC could be rapidly translated into applicationsby a corps of developers who are all trained up and ready to fly the planeonce it is finally built. That is the optimistic perspective.
Quantum circuits are already being developed using quantumprogramming languages and so-called quantumdevelopment kits (QDKs),such as Qiskit by IBM and Google Cirq based on Python; and Q# by Microsoftbased on the C# language. The next stepis to develop libraries and workflows for different application domains.Examples of the former are IBMs Aqua and Q# libraries. Examples of the latterare D-Waves Ocean development tool kit for hybrid quantum-classicalapplications and to translate quantum optimization problems into quantumcircuits; or Zapatas Orquestra to compose, run and analyze quantum workflows.On top of the circuits and libraries come the domain-specific applicationplatforms. Orchestrating and integrating classical and quantum workflows tosolve real problems with hybrid quantum-classical algorithms is the name of thegame for the next few years.[xvi]
Quantum-inspired software is already in operation, becausethese applications run on classical computers and not on quantum machines. Amajor example is Fujitsu Quantum-Inspired Digital Annealer Services.[xvii]Even on a theoretical level, quantum ideas have already been fruitful inseveral problem areas, where restructuring problems using quantum principleshave resulted in improved algorithms, proofs, and refuting erroneous oldalgorithms.[xviii]Quantum-inspired software is closely related to quantum-ready software, which can be run on suitable QCs once theyare available.
The industrialization of QCs has entered a critical period.Major countries and leading enterprises in the world are investing huge humanand material resources to advance research in quantum computing.
Google perhaps prematurely used the term quantum supremacy in October 2019 whenit announced the results of its quantum supremacy experiment in a blog[xix]and an article in Nature.[xx]The experiment used Googles 54-qubit processor, named Sycamore, to perform acontrived benchmark test in 200 seconds that would take the fastestsupercomputer 10,000 years to do. But at some point in the future, true quantumsupremacy may indeed be achieved.
Quantum supremacywas originally defined by Caltechs John Preskill[xxi]as the point at which the capabilities of a QC exceed those of any availableclassical computer; the latter is usually understood to be the most advancedsupercomputer built on classical architecture. At one point this was estimatedbe when a QC with 50 or more qubits could be demonstrated. But some experts sayit depends more on how many logical operations (gates) can be implemented in asystem of qubits before their coherence decays, at which point errorsproliferate and further computation becomes impossible. How the qubits areconnected also matters.[xxii]
This led IBM-researchers to formulate the concept of quantum volume (QV) in 2017. More QVmeans a more powerful computer, but QV cannot be increased by increasing onlythe number of qubits. QV is a hardware-agnostic performance measurement forgate-based QCs that considers a number of elements including the number ofqubits, connectivity of the qubits, gate fidelity, cross talk, and circuitcompiler efficiency. In late 2020, IonQ announced that it has calculated a QVof 4 million for its 5th generation QC. Before this announcement, Honeywell's 7-qubition-trap QC had the industry's highest published quantum volume of 128, and IBMhad the next highest QV of 64 with its 27-qubit superconducting quantummachine.[xxiii]In early March 2021, Honeywell claimed to have regained the lead by achieving aQV of 512 with an updated version of System Model H1 QC.[xxiv]Alternating announcements like these from the major QC developers are likely tocontinue for the time being, as each compete for the title of most powerful QC.
Rather than thinking about quantum supremacy as an absolutethreshold or milestone, it is wiser to think about so-called quantum supremacyexperiments as benchmarking experiments for the new technology, perhaps similarto the way we came to express automobile engine power in measures of horsepower. There is also an intriguing question lingering over the whole concept ofquantum supremacy, which is: How could anyone know that a quantum computer isgenuinely doing something that is impossible for a classical one to do ratherthan that they just havent yet found a classical algorithm that is clever enoughto do the job?[xxv]It may be that the advent of quantum computing will force and inspire newdevelopments in classical computing algorithms, something we are already seeingin the concept of quantum-inspired computing software, which will be discussedfurther in a later section.
There is a difference between quantum advantage and quantum supremacy. Quantum supremacy is whenit can be demonstrated that a QC can do something that cannot be done on aclassical computer. Quantum advantage is that a quantum solution can provide areal-world advantage over using the classical approach. (It does not imply thata classical computer could not do it at all.)
There is a second meaning one could attach to quantumsupremacy, which is to mean which nation will hold the technological advantageto this technology of the future. The current list of Top 500 (classical)supercomputers[xxvi]provides a good indication of where the hot spots of quantum computing willlikely be, since no country or region will want to cede a hard-gained advantagein classical computing. Currently, 43 percent of supercomputers are in China,23 percent in the United States, 7 percent in Japan, and about 19 percent inEurope (including the United Kingdom but excluding Russia).
In the European Union, the European Commission founded the Quantum Flagship as a ten-yearcoordinated research initiative which will have at least 1 billion in funding.The long-term vision is the creation of a Quantum Web, defined as quantumcomputers, simulators and sensors interconnected via quantum networksdistributing information and quantum resources such as coherence andentanglement.[xxvii]
The equivalent U.S. initiative is known as the National Quantum Initiative (NQI), andthe $1.2 billion of U.S. government funds are going to the National Instituteof Standards and Technology (NIST), National Science Foundation (NSF)Multidisciplinary Centers for Quantum Research and Education and to theDepartment of Energy Research and National Quantum Information Science ResearchCenters.[xxviii]NIST partners with the University of Colorado Boulder on quantum computingresearch through JILAs Quantum Information Science&Technology (QIST).[xxix]NIST, the Laboratory for Physical Sciences (LPS), and the University of Marylandhave formed the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI)[xxx]to conduct fundamental quantum research. The Joint Center for QuantumInformation and Computer Science (QuICS)[xxxi]was founded in another partnership between NIST and the University of Marylandto specifically advance advances research QC science and quantum informationtheory.
The Chinese government is investing upwards of $10bn inquantum computing, an order of magnitude greater than the respectiveinvestments of $1.2bn by the U.S. government and the E.U. The U.K. and Japanesegovernments are each investing in the order of $300m, with Canada and SouthKorea investing about $40m each.[xxxii]
Chinas multi-billion quantum computing initiative aims toachieve significant breakthroughs by 2030. President Xi has committed billionsto establish the Chinese National Laboratory for Quantum Information Sciences.
The implication of the difference in funding with China, isthat United States is mostly relying on private investments by its tech giantsto remain competitive. Time will tell if that is a wise strategy. It is not asif large tech companies in China are not investing in quantum computing too Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu are all known to be heavily investing in thetechnology. According to some metrics, China has already gained an early advantageby accumulating more quantum computing-related patents than the United States.[xxxiii]In 2019 Google announced that its a QC performed a particular computation in200 seconds that would take todays fastest supercomputers 10,000 years. But inDecember 2000, Chinese researchers at the University of Science and Technologyin China (USTC) claimed that their prototype QC (based on photons) is 10billion times faster than Googles.[xxxiv]
The Chinese desire to lead the world on quantum computing isnot purely motivated by a desire for industrial competitiveness and economicpower. Threat assessments[xxxv]point to Chinese quantum research and experiments in defense applications suchas:
Using entanglement for secure long-distancemilitary communications, e.g. between satellites and earth stations
Quantum radar that could nullify current U.S.advantages in stealth technology against conventional radars
Quantum submarine detection to ranges of overfive kilometers that would limit the operations of U.S. nuclear submarines
Quantum computers are very hard to build. They requireintricate manipulations of subatomic particles, and operating in a vacuumenvironment or at cryogenic temperatures.
The state of quantum computing resembles the early days ofthe aircraft and automobile industries, when there was a similar proliferationof diverse architectures and exotic designs. Eventually, as quantum technologymatures, a convergence can be expected similar to what we have seen in thoseindustries. In fact, the arrival of such a technological convergence would be agood measure of a growing maturity of quantum computing technology.
There are a number of technical criteria[xxxvi]for making a good QC:
Qubit must stay coherent for long enough to allow the computing to be completed inthe state of superposition. That requires isolation because decoherence occurswhen qubits interact with the outside world
Qubits must be highly connected. This occurs through entanglement and is needed foroperations to act on multiple qubits
High-fidelityoperations are needed. As pointed out above, classical digital computersrely on the digital nature of signals for noise resistance. However, sincequbits need to precisely represent numbers that are not just zero and oneduring the computation state, digital noise reduction is not possible and thenoise problem is more analogous to that in an old-fashioned analog computer.Since noise cannot be easily prevented and must therefore be mitigated, thefocus of current research is on noise-correction techniques
Gate operations must be fast. In practice, this is a trade-off between maintainingcoherence and high-fidelity
Highscalability. It should be obviousthat QCs will only be useful when they can be scaled large enough to solvevaluable problems
Currently, the two quantum technologies showing the greatestpromise and attracting the most interest and investment dollars are superconducting qubits and trapped ions. These and other morenascent or theoretical technologies are presented in Table 1, along with themain proponents in each technology.
Table SEQ Table * ARABIC1. Qubit Technologies and MainProponents
Technology
Main Proponents
Superconducting qubits (called transmons by some) are realized by using a microwave signal to put a resistance-free current in a superposition state. This technology has fast gate times and the advantage of more proven technologies superconducting circuits are based on well-known complementary metal-oxide semiconductor technology (CMOS) used in digital computers. But superconducting qubits have fast decoherence times and require more error correction. Superconduction requires cooling to a temperature very close to absolute zero. The technology is considered to be highly scalable.
IBM
Rigetti
D-Wave
Alibaba
Intel
NEC
Quantum Circuits
Oxford Quantum Circuits
Ion Trap QCs work by trapping ions electric fields and holding them in place. The outermost electron orbiting the nucleus is put in different states and used as a qubit. Ion Trap qubits have longer coherence times and can operate with minor cooling, but do require a high vacuum. Thought the first quantum logic gate was demonstrated in 1995 using trapped atomic ions, at a system level this technology is less mature and require progress in multiple domains including vacuum, laser, and optical systems, radio frequency and microwave technology, and coherent electronic controllers
IonQ
Honeywell
Alpine Quantum Technologies
Photonic qubits are photons (light particles) that operate on silicon chip pathways. Such qubits do no require extreme cooling, and silicon chip fabrication techniques are well-established, making this technology highly scalable.
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Pathogenic, auto-immune or viral, all diseases are actually epigenetic – The Times of India Blog
Posted: at 6:23 am
Though the coronavirus pandemic is the greatest tragedy the world has witnessed in recent times, it also has a potential to be a blessing in disguise as it can transform the way we understand and treat diseases.
If we look at all the diseases broadly, they can be clubbed into three large groups.
Most of the diseases we laypeople recognize are caused by alien pathogens, be it a bacterium or some other parasites. Malaises like cholera, malaria,amebiasis, mucormycosis are simple in nature as they show a clear cause-and-effect relationship between a pathogen and malaise and hence the cure is, in general, eradicating of the alien pathogen.
The other group is of auto-immune diseases. Phenomena like cancer or allergic reaction belong to this confusing group as here the body itself messes things up. These diseases are tricky to cure as they are by-products of some of the critical internal systems. So, to cure them we either remove such cells physically or try and find a way to kill them selectively or just counter their activities by suppressing them, even at a cost.
The last group is the trickiest and that is the virus-caused diseases. Though most of them are not too harmful as a healthy body can deal with them using native immune system, but that is actually the only option as, if the immune system cant deal with them, there is no real cure. We have anti-viral drugs but not at all comparable to the level of success that anti-biotics or anti-parasitic drugs (sad to say that only temporarily) enjoy.
Corona virus diseases belong to the last group and SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is a specific case where the native immune system of some people is not able to cope with it.
In SARS-CoV-2 infection, we have an alien virus pathogen causing auto-immune reaction, making it a bridge between all three groups that we treat differently today and hence it demands that we start re-looking at what we call a disease.
To understand this phenomenon, we have to go to the source of all life, the genetic codes that are enshrined in each living cell. These genetic codes are more like instruction/equations of chemical reactions. They give expression to mindboggling complexity while remaining simple in nature by following simple rules.
Life is a game of these rules and evolution is a game of finding new rules that work. If we put these two together, a disease is a random process of finding new rules that work through genetic interaction between all life forms.
If we try and use a metaphor to understand this better, life is a book, but not a linear one. It has commands with if-then logic.
It is a bit like, if there is a person wearing blue shirt in the room, read the 467thline of the book, but if there is a person wearing red shirt, read the 145thline. This just gets worse as it can even be, if they have a dog, read 179th, so on and on. There is no end to the complexity in the book as it responds to the entire reality and hence, we are now hitting a roadblock in terms of how to use genetics, as it is now understood that there is more outside than inside in terms of the story.
This science of finding relationships about how external factors dictate the way genetic code is read is called epigenetics.
Epigenetics is the quantum physics of biology telling us yet again that the God does play dice.
Thankfully, it is not as bad as it seems. Just as we have probabilistic handles to understand quantum physics, epigenetic is also orderly and has cause-and-effect relationships that we can fathom or will fathom in future (just as we hope for the quantum physics).
This new understanding of life demands a new way of curing, i.e., ensuring that the book is read coherently and if it is made to stray, bring it back on main story-line.
Keeping the book reading on course is obviously life-style corrections that reduce chances of straying, but the challenge is what to do when it goes off-the-course.
The new healthcare of the future would be all about transcending the ideas like parasites or viruses or even auto-immune disorders. They are all part of the epigenetic forces and hence the cure is best found within than without.
Logically speaking, for every disease, the clue is to find the mis-reading of the code it thrives on and finding a way to disrupt it, but there is another twist in the tail/tale or rather an advantage, and that is, each of us are a different version of the book and hence, each of us will respond differently (as we have seen in case of SARS-CoV-2). It is these different responses will help us identify clues if we look for them.
As SARS-CoV-2 is studied a lot, a great start would be to do genetic sequencing of those who have the misfortune of having the genetic predisposition to have cytokine storm when the viral information is inserted in their book. The same process must be conducted for each of the specific cases, be it malaria or cancer.
In short, we need to find the page in the book that derails the metabolic process and find people who have that page first. Once we manage to find that, we will be able to manage the healthcare in a more rational way.
This is clearly a job of couple of millennia (if we are lucky) and SARS-CoV-2 could be a Gods way of asking us to move one step forward.
Views expressed above are the author's own.
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Outlook on the Quantum Technology Global Market to 2026 – – GlobeNewswire
Posted: at 6:23 am
Dublin, May 14, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Quantum Technology Market by Computing, Communications, Imaging, Security, Sensing, Modeling and Simulation 2021 - 2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the quantum technology market. It assesses companies/organizations focused on quantum technology including R&D efforts and potential gaming-changing quantum tech-enabled solutions. The report evaluates the impact of quantum technology upon other major technologies and solution areas including AI, Edge Computing, Blockchain, IoT, and Big Data Analytics. The report provides an analysis of quantum technology investment, R&D, and prototyping by region and within each major country globally.
The report also provides global and regional forecasts as well as the outlook for quantum technology's impact on embedded hardware, software, applications, and services from 2021 to 2026. The report provides conclusions and recommendations for a wide range of industries and commercial beneficiaries including semiconductor companies, communications providers, high-speed computing companies, artificial intelligence vendors, and more.
Select Report Findings:
Much more than only computing, the quantum technology market provides a foundation for improving all digital communications, applications, content, and commerce. In the realm of communications, quantum technology will influence everything from encryption to the way that signals are passed from point A to point B. While currently in the R&D phase, networked quantum information and communications technology (ICT) is anticipated to become a commercial reality that will represent nothing less than a revolution for virtually every aspect of ICT.
However, there will be a need to integrate the ICT supply chain with quantum technologies in a manner that does not attempt to replace every aspect of classical computing but instead leverages a hybrid computational framework. Traditional High-Performance Computing (HPC) will continue to be used for many existing problems for the foreseeable future, while quantum technologies will be used for encrypting communications, signaling, and will be the underlying basis in the future for all commerce transactions. This does not mean that quantum encryption will replace Blockchain, but rather provide improved encryption for blockchain technology.
The quantum technology market will be a substantial enabler of dramatically improved sensing and instrumentation. For example, gravity sensors may be made significantly more precise through quantum sensing. Quantum electromagnetic sensing provides the ability to detect minute differences in the electromagnetic field. This will provide a wide-ranging number of applications, such as within the healthcare arena wherein quantum electromagnetic sensing will provide the ability to provide significantly improved mapping of vital organs. Quantum sensing will also have applications across a wide range of other industries such as transportation wherein there is the potential for substantially improved safety, especially for self-driving vehicles.
Commercial applications for the quantum imaging market are potentially wide-ranging including exploration, monitoring, and safety. For example, gas image processing may detect minute changes that could lead to early detection of tank failure or the presence of toxic chemicals. In concert with quantum sensing, quantum imaging may also help with various public safety-related applications such as search and rescue. Some problems are too difficult to calculate but can be simulated and modeled. Quantum simulations and modeling is an area that involves the use of quantum technology to enable simulators that can model complex systems that are beyond the capabilities of classical HPC. Even the fastest supercomputers today cannot adequately model many problems such as those found in atomic physics, condensed-matter physics, and high-energy physics.
Key Topics Covered:
1.0 Executive Summary
2.0 Introduction
3.0 Quantum Technology and Application Analysis3.1 Quantum Computing3.2 Quantum Cryptography Communication3.3 Quantum Sensing and Imaging3.4 Quantum Dots Particles3.5 Quantum Cascade Laser3.6 Quantum Magnetometer3.7 Quantum Key Distribution3.8 Quantum Cloud vs. Hybrid Platform3.9 Quantum 5G Communication3.10 Quantum 6G Impact3.11 Quantum Artificial Intelligence3.12 Quantum AI Technology3.13 Quantum IoT Technology3.14 Quantum Edge Network3.15 Quantum Blockchain
4.0 Company Analysis4.1 1QB Information Technologies Inc.4.2 ABB (Keymile)4.3 Adtech Optics Inc.4.4 Airbus Group4.5 Akela Laser Corporation4.6 Alibaba Group Holding Limited4.7 Alpes Lasers SA4.8 Altairnano4.9 Amgen Inc.4.10 Anhui Qasky Science and Technology Limited Liability Company (Qasky)4.11 Anyon Systems Inc.4.12 AOSense Inc.4.13 Apple Inc. (InVisage Technologies)4.14 Biogen Inc.4.15 Block Engineering4.16 Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.4.17 BT Group4.18 Cambridge Quantum Computing Ltd.4.19 Chinese Academy of Sciences4.20 D-Wave Systems Inc.4.21 Emerson Electric Corporation4.22 Fujitsu Ltd.4.23 Gem Systems4.24 GeoMetrics Inc.4.25 Google Inc.4.26 GWR Instruments Inc.4.27 Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.4.28 Hewlett Packard Enterprise4.29 Honeywell International Inc.4.30 HP Development Company L.P.4.31 IBM Corporation4.32 ID Quantique4.33 Infineon Technologies4.34 Intel Corporation4.35 KETS Quantum Security4.36 KPN4.37 LG Display Co. Ltd.4.38 Lockheed Martin Corporation4.39 MagiQ Technologies Inc.4.40 Marine Magnetics4.41 McAfee LLC4.42 MicroSemi Corporation4.43 Microsoft Corporation4.44 Mirsense4.45 Mitsubishi Electric Corp.4.46 M-Squared Lasers Limited4.47 Muquans4.48 Nanoco Group PLC4.49 Nanoplus Nanosystems and Technologies GmbH4.50 Nanosys Inc.4.51 NEC Corporation4.52 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation4.53 NN-Labs LLC.4.54 Nokia Corporation4.55 Nucrypt4.56 Ocean NanoTech LLC4.57 Oki Electric4.58 Oscilloquartz SA4.59 OSRAM4.60 PQ Solutions Limited (Post-Quantum)4.61 Pranalytica Inc.4.62 QC Ware Corp.4.63 QD Laser Co. Inc.4.64 QinetiQ4.65 Quantum Circuits Inc.4.66 Quantum Materials Corp.4.67 Qubitekk4.68 Quintessence Labs4.69 QuSpin4.70 QxBranch LLC4.71 Raytheon Company4.72 Rigetti Computing4.73 Robert Bosch GmbH4.74 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (QD Vision Inc.)4.75 SeQureNet (Telecom ParisTech)4.76 SK Telecom4.77 ST Microelectronics4.78 Texas Instruments4.79 Thorlabs Inc4.80 Toshiba Corporation4.81 Tristan Technologies4.82 Twinleaf4.83 Universal Quantum Devices4.84 Volkswagen AG4.85 Wavelength Electronics Inc.4.86 ZTE Corporation
5.0 Quantum Technology Market Analysis and Forecasts 2021 - 20265.1 Global Quantum Technology Market 2021 - 20265.2 Global Quantum Technology Market by Technology 2021 - 20265.3 Quantum Computing Market 2021 - 20265.4 Quantum Cryptography Communication Market 2021 - 20265.5 Quantum Sensing and Imaging Market 2021 - 20265.6 Quantum Dots Market 2021 - 20265.7 Quantum Cascade Laser Market 2021 - 20265.8 Quantum Magnetometer Market 2021 - 20265.9 Quantum Key Distribution Market 2021 - 20265.9.1 Global Quantum Key Distribution Market by Technology5.9.1.1 Global Quantum Key Distribution Market by Infrastructure Type5.9.2 Global Quantum Key Distribution Market by Industry Vertical5.9.2.1 Global Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) Market by Government5.9.2.2 Global Quantum Key Distribution Market by Enterprise/Civilian Industry5.10 Global Quantum Technology Market by Deployment5.11 Global Quantum Technology Market by Sector5.12 Global Quantum Technology Market by Connectivity5.13 Global Quantum Technology Market by Revenue Source5.14 Quantum Intelligence Market 2021 - 20265.15 Quantum IoT Technology Market 2021 - 20265.16 Global Quantum Edge Network Market5.17 Global Quantum Blockchain Market5.18 Global Quantum Exascale Computing Market5.19 Regional Quantum Technology Market 2021 - 20265.19.1 Regional Comparison of Global Quantum Technology Market5.19.2 Global Quantum Technology Market by Region5.19.2.1 North America Quantum Technology Market by Country5.19.2.2 Europe Quantum Technology Market by Country5.19.2.3 Asia Pacific Quantum Technology Market by Country5.19.2.4 Middle East and Africa Quantum Technology Market by Country5.19.2.5 Latin America Quantum Technology Market by Country
6.0 Conclusions and Recommendations
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/pcwigy
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Outlook on the Quantum Technology Global Market to 2026 - - GlobeNewswire
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Loyalty to Trump catapults Elise Stefanik into Republican stardom – Reuters
Posted: at 6:22 am
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) speaks to the media as the impeachment trial of U.S. President Donald Trump continues in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
U.S. Representative Elise Stefanik's first turn in the national limelight came when she mounted an impassioned defense of Donald Trump at his first impeachment trial in 2019, leading the then-president to declare that "a star is born."
Stefanik's star could rise higher as Trump now pushes for her to be elected the No. 3 Republican in the House of Representatives, where her colleagues are set to vote on Wednesday to remove Representative Liz Cheney from that role for rejecting his continued false claims that the 2020 presidential election was marred by widespread fraud.
It is a profound change for Stefanik, a New York state Republican first elected in 2014 on a moderate platform, who avoided saying Trump's name publicly during the 2016 campaign season and did not vote for him in that year's Republican presidential primary.
The change won over party leaders in the House, Representatives Kevin McCarthy and Steve Scalise - who along with Trump endorsed Stefanik to replace Cheney, the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney - as well as many people in her rural district, which encompasses much of the Adirondack Mountains.
"Here in Fulton County, we're proud and very happy with the path she's on," said Sue McNeil, chair of the county's Republican committee since 2008. "We're Trump country up here."
Staff for Stefanik did not make her available for an interview. She is one of 147 Republicans in Congress who voted in January to try to block the certification of Democratic President Joe Biden's election win, hours after a deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters.
Stefanik, now 36, was the youngest woman ever elected to Congress when she first won her district, which had voted twice for Democratic President Barack Obama and had been represented by Democrats in Congress since 1993.
She had worked for establishment Republicans including former President George W. Bush and the party's 2012 vice presidential nominee, former House Speaker Paul Ryan.
Michael Steel, who worked with Stefanik on Ryan's campaign, said Stefanik had grown more conservative along with her district. But he also saw no big clash between her previous reputation as a moderate Republican and her embrace of Trump.
"President Trump is not particularly conservative in many policy areas," said Steel, who was a spokesman for Ryan's campaign and for former House Speaker John Boehner.
'NOT ABOUT TELLING THE TRUTH'
The conservative Club for Growth, which rates members of Congress, gives her a lifetime score of just 35% for voting in line with its priorities, one of the worst among House Republicans, and well below Cheney's 65%. That has led some conservative House members to push back against elevating Stefanik.
"Her voting record is atrocious," Representative Chip Roy said last week on radio's "Erick Erickson Show."
On Tuesday Roy asked fellow Republicans to consider a more conservative contender for the job or to leave the position open, according to a letter to the caucus seen by Reuters.
Stefanik has worked hard, with some success, to help elect other Republican women to Congress. Last year, she raised and donated over $2 million for Republican candidates. Three fourths of that went to Republican women, who more than doubled their numbers in the House, although they still lag behind the Democrats.
But Olivia Troye, who was an aide to former Vice President Mike Pence before leaving in August, said it had been "disappointing" to see Stefanik potentially elevated into leadership for being a Trump acolyte who advances his voting fraud claims.
"She's not getting it on the merits of being bipartisan, she's not getting it on the merits of her policymaking, her governing," said Troye, part of the Republican Accountability Project. "She's getting it on the merits of lying. It's not about telling the truth. She's rising in power for her lies."
"The more they attack Elise Stefanik, the stronger she becomes," said her senior adviser, Alex DeGrasse.
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Over 100 Republicans, Including Former Officials, Threaten to Split from GOP – The New York Times
Posted: at 6:22 am
More than 100 Republicans, including some former elected officials, are preparing to release a letter this week threatening to form a third party if the Republican Party does not make certain changes, according to an organizer of the effort.
The statement is expected to take aim at former President Donald J. Trumps stranglehold on Republicans, which signatories to the document have deemed unconscionable.
When in our democratic republic, forces of conspiracy, division, and despotism arise, it is the patriotic duty of citizens to act collectively in defense of liberty and justice, reads the preamble to the full statement, which is expected to be released on Thursday.
The effort comes as House Republican leaders are expected on Wednesday to oust Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming from their ranks because of her outspoken criticism of Mr. Trumps election lies.
This is a first step, said Miles Taylor, an organizer of the effort and a former Trump-era Department of Homeland Security official who anonymously wrote a book condemning the Trump administration. In October, Mr. Taylor acknowledged he was the author of both the book and a 2018 New York Times Op-Ed article.
This is us saying that a group of more than 100 prominent Republicans think that the situation has gotten so dire with the Republican Party that it is now time to seriously consider whether an alternative might be the only option, he said.
The list of people signing the statement includes former officials at both the state and national level who once were governors, members of Congress, ambassadors, cabinet secretaries, state legislators and Republican Party chairmen, Mr. Taylor said.
Mr. Taylor declined to name the signers. Reuters reported earlier that the former governors Tom Ridge of Pennsylvania and Christine Todd Whitman of New Jersey will sign it, as will former Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters and former Representatives Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania, Barbara Comstock of Virginia, Reid Ribble of Wisconsin and Mickey Edwards of Oklahoma.
Mr. Taylor declined on Tuesday to reveal the specific changes that the coalition was planning to demand of the Republican Party in its statement.
Im still a Republican, but Im hanging on by the skin of my teeth because how quickly the party has divorced itself from truth and reason, Mr. Taylor said. Im one of those in the group that feels very strongly that if we cant get the G.O.P. back to a rational party that supports free minds, free markets, and free people, Im out and a lot of people are coming with me.
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Over 100 Republicans, Including Former Officials, Threaten to Split from GOP - The New York Times
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As 100+ Republicans threaten to leave the party, a Denver consultant explains why its not that easy – The Denver Channel
Posted: at 6:22 am
DENVER More than 100 Republican heavyweights could part ways with the Grand Old Party on Thursday and create their own movement if conservatives don't ditch President Donald Trump and his influence over elections.
The names of who signed the letter have not been released, but an excerpt from the letter was leaked to the New York Times stating, "When in our democratic republic, forces of conspiracy, division, and despotism arise, it is the patriotic duty of citizens to act collectively in defense of liberty and justice."
Sarah Lenti, a Denverite and former Republican, says she has felt those forces before. She left her post as a policy adviser on Republican presidential campaigns to join the Lincoln Project as Trump was gearing up for his second run.
"When you look at the cult of Trump, it's less about policy as it is about loyalty to a figure," Lenti said. "The Republican Party needs to get back to a party built on policy competition, and they've lost that."
But she says the move, no matter how bold, is unlikely to gain steam.
"They're just going to siphon off Republicans from Republicans and make it easier for Democrats to win," Lenti said. "If your strength is waned, you're hurting yourselves."
The letter is being released one day after Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney was ousted for her opposition to Trump and his behavior on Jan. 6 that contributed to the riots at the U.S. Capitol.
"I think she's very brave," Lenti said. "I don't know that this bodes well for her getting reelected in Wyoming. And with respect to a possible presidential run, it seems like the pulse of the Republican Party is with Trump right now."
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Republican who challenged Michigan election results now running for Secretary of State – MLive.com
Posted: at 6:21 am
Kristina Karamo falsely claimed former President Donald Trump won Michigan and spent weeks challenging the election results. Now shes running for Secretary of State, the office responsible for administering election law.
Karamo, an Oak Park resident, was a poll challenger at the TCF Center in Detroit who claimed she witnessed irregularities in the processing of absentee ballots. Karamo made dozens of appearances on right-wing media outlets as a whistleblower, testified before a Michigan legislative committee and supported legal efforts to overturn the presidential election.
Related: A closer look at how Trump lost Michigan: State releases election results by city, township
Michigans certified election results show President Joe Biden won the state by 154,188 votes. Last month, Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson released details on 250 post-election audits that reaffirmed the accuracy of the election.
The majority of audits were conducted by bipartisan county clerks. The audits found no examples of fraud or intentional misconduct by election officials and no evidence that equipment used to tabulate or report election results did not function properly when properly programmed and tested.
Benson, a Democrat, has called the 2020 election the most fair, secure and accurate in Michigans history. The former president and his allies continue to allege widespread fraud caused him to lose the state regardless, despite a lack of evidence.
Benson has not announced whether she will run for re-election in 2022. She was elected in 2018 with 53% of the vote.
Karamo formed her candidate committee on March 19. Her campaign issued a press release Thursday announcing her candidacy.
The release touts her appearance on Fox News programs. Karamo was interviewed by Sean Hannity, Lous Dobbs and other conservative media personalities about her experiences at the TCF Center in Detroit. Her campaign website lists election integrity as a top issue and states Karamo built a patriot team who are researching election failures.
Running to be Secretary of State is not a career move for me, Karmano said in a statement. I am running to remove corruption from our elections and from the Michigan SOS office. That corruption is a real threat to our survival as a state and as a nation. A secure election is how we the people, give our consent to be governed.
Cathleen Postmus, a Plainfield Township clerk, is also running for the Republican Partys nomination. Postmus was re-elected to the clerks office for a second term in 2020 and ran unopposed. A website for her secretary of state campaign also cites a need for increased transparency and accountability in how we run our elections.
Shaun Whitehead filed a candidate committee with no party affiliation in March.
Karamo testified before the Senate Oversight Committee during a December hearing on the election. Oversight Committee Chair Ed McBroom, R-Vulcan, said the probe revealed no evidence of widespread fraud.
Like Trump, Karamo criticized Michigan Republicans who pushed back against allegations that the election was stolen. Karamo called then-House Speaker Lee Chatfield, a Republican who met with Trump after the election but refused to replace the Democratic electors, a fraud in a tweet published days after Michigans Electoral College vote.
Karamo repeatedly pointed to Antrim County as evidence of alleged irregularities that tipped the state to Biden. A legal battle is ongoing over the results. An audit and hand recount of the votes showed a total of 9,759 votes for Trump and 5,959 for Biden a net change of 12 votes from the tabulated results.
Karamo included her affidavit in a lawsuit filed by members of Black Voices for Trump. The lawsuit sought an injunction preventing Michigans results from being certified, but was rejected in a 4-3 decision by the Michigan Supreme Court.
Karamo also filed to intervene in a lawsuit filed by the Texas attorney general that sought to block Michigans Electoral College votes from being counted. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Texas lacked standing to bring the lawsuit.
Karamo is a member of MIGOP state committee and was on the Black leadership committee with Right to Life, an anti-abortion group. She unsuccessfully ran for Oakland County commissioner in 2018.
Karamo teaches a college orientation class at Wayne County Community College. She has a masters degree in Christian Apologetics, the study of defending theology, and a bachelors degree in communication and media studies from Oakland University.
MLive contacted Karamos campaign with a request for comment. The campaign did not arrange an interview Thursday.
READ MORE ON MLIVE:
A closer look at how Trump lost Michigan: State releases election results by city, township
Judge reins in sprawling Michigan election fraud lawsuit
Antrim County hand recount results in 12 new votes for Trump
With the world watching, a Republican state canvasser helps make Bidens win in Michigan official
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Republican supermajority in the West Virginia House grows by yet another – West Virginia MetroNews
Posted: at 6:21 am
The Republican supermajority in West Virginias House of Delegates just got bigger.
Delegate Mick Bates, who had served as a Democrat, announced that he will switch to become a Republican.
I expect that this decision may disappoint and upset some, Bates, who represents people in the Beckley area, stated in an announcement about the party switch. I believe that a greater number will welcome it and see it as the right thing to do at the right time for the people I represent.
The number of Republicans in the House of Delegates now stands at 78.
There are now 22 Democrats in the chamber that used to be dominated by that party.
This is surprising and disappointing, said state Democratic Party Chairwoman Belinda Biafore, in an emailed statement of reaction.
It seems Delegate Bates has public service confused with self-service. Delegate Bates has propped himself up on Democratic ideals and his constituency put their faith in him. Hes turning his back on them. Its odd but telling that someone who is so outspoken against the majority party has decided to join them to benefit himself politically.
Republicans already had an enormous numbers advantage in the House of Delegates, coming out of last months election with 76 of the 100 seats. That was an 18-seat pickup for House Republicans.
Then in December, Delegate Jason Barrett announced he would switch his registration from Democrat to Republican.
With Bates now saying the same, House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, welcomed another member.
Mick has always been a pro-business Delegate, and we certainly welcome his credentials and his experience as a small business owner to the party, Hanshaw stated.
This is an unprecedented time for the House of Delegates, with the largest Republican majority the state has ever seen, and as we continue to do the work of making West Virginia the easy choice for people and businesses to call home, the Republican party will only continue to grow.
Bates changed his party affiliation to Republican at the Raleigh County Courthouse on Wednesday morning. He had served as a Democrat since being elected to the House of Delegates in 2014, when he defeated Republican incumbent Linda Sumner.
Bates competed for the role of House minority leader last year, but Doug Skaff of Kanawha County won the Democratic caucuss support for the role.
Shortly after that, when it was time to vote for the House speaker for this past regular session, Bates was the only Democrat to vote for Hanshaw rather than Skaff.
Bates had been the lead Democrat on the House Finance Committee, but he was not named to the committee at all after that.
Following his failed attempt to run for minority leader, Delegate Bates announced to members of our caucus that his future political plans meant a party switch. He did not believe that he could win as a Democrat, so he decided that he would leave the Democratic Party, Skaff stated today.
Delegate Bates must have decided that now is the right time for him to turn his back on the constituents who elected him to prioritize his future political ambitions. He is more focused on the next election than the next generation of West Virginians.
House Minority Whip Shawn Fluharty was also publicly critical of Bates.
Bates just served as Democratic Party House Caucus Chair. We went from 41 members to 23 under his leadership. Then he ran to be Minority Leader. Lost. Now hes switching parties. What a profile in courage, Fluharty, D-Ohio, wrote on Twitter.
Bates wrote in his statement that his decision is in line with many constituents in the district he has served.
I am far from the first person to make such a change and I will not be the last. Over the past 3 years there has been a 30 percent swing in registrations in Raleigh County from Democrat to Republican. The line often used, and attributed to President Ronald Reagan, is that I didnt leave the party, the party left me,' he stated.
The West Virginia Secretary of State now shows that Republicans outnumber Democrats in the state 433,287 to 408,572.
In Raleigh County, where Bates lives, the numbers are 18,668 Republicans to 15,272 Democrats.
The same month in 2017, Democrats outnumbered Republicans in the state 542,237 to 389,916. The numbers in Raleigh County at that time were 16,284 Republicans and 22,034 Democrats.
Bates wrote that as politics have become more nationalized, West Virginia has reflected that.
There used to be a difference between the way West Virginia Democrats and Washington Democrats were viewed. People no longer see that difference, he stated.
At a national level, the controlling interests and leadership of the Democratic party continue to pursue positions that alienate and anger voters in rural parts of the country and dont reflect the priorities, values or beliefs of the people in West Virginia. This is not changing and appears to be getting worse, not better.
Bates is a physical therapist and the owner and chief executive of Bodyworks as well as the president of Praxis Corp. He is a member and former chairman of the Raleigh County Chamber of Commerce, a former president and member of the Board of Directors of the West Virginia Physical Therapy Association and served on the West Virginia Workers Compensation Committee. Bates and his wife, Pamela, are the parents of four teenagers.
I have many friends that are registered Democrats and a number of independent friends, he wrote. I have an equal number of friends and supporters that are registered Republican. We are all West Virginians who need to work together to move this State forward and address its many problems.
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Republican supermajority in the West Virginia House grows by yet another - West Virginia MetroNews
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