30/10/2025 La révolution quantique : lorsque le réel devient incertain

La physique quantique a profondément bouleversé notre compréhension du monde. Cette branche de la physique, qui étudie le comportement de la matière et de l’énergie à l’échelle subatomique, a remis en question nombre de nos certitudes sur la nature de la réalité. Loin d’être un simple domaine de spécialistes, la physique quantique soulève des questions fondamentales qui touchent à notre perception même du monde qui nous entoure.

Plonger dans cet univers fascinant, c’est s’interroger sur la nature profonde de la réalité, sur le rôle de l’observateur dans la construction du réel, et sur les liens étonnants entre le monde quantique et les phénomènes biologiques. C’est un voyage passionnant qui bouscule nos représentations et nous invite à reconsidérer notre place dans l’Univers. Embarquons ensemble pour explorer ces mystères de l’infiniment petit qui façonnent notre réalité.

Aux origines de la physique quantique

La physique quantique a vu le jour au début du 20e siècle, avec les travaux pionniers de scientifiques comme Max Planck, Niels Bohr ou Erwin Schrödinger. Ces physiciens ont mis en évidence des phénomènes qui remettaient en question les lois de la physique classique, jusque-là considérées comme universelles.

L’un des tournants décisifs a été la découverte du principe d’incertitude par Werner Heisenberg en 1927. Ce principe stipule qu’il est impossible de mesurer avec une précision absolue à la fois la position et la quantité de mouvement d’une particule quantique. Plus on cherche à déterminer l’un de ces paramètres, plus l’autre devient incertain.

Ce résultat a eu des conséquences dévastatrices sur notre vision du monde. Il signifiait que le déterminisme absolu de la physique classique était une illusion, et que le monde quantique était fondamentalement probabiliste et indéterminé.

Particules et ondes : le mystère de la dualité

Un autre concept central de la physique quantique est la dualité onde-particule. Les particules subatomiques comme les électrons, les photons ou les atomes se comportent parfois comme des particules, avec une position et une quantité de mouvement bien définies, et parfois comme des ondes, avec des propriétés ondulatoires.

Cette dualité onde-particule est l’une des manifestations les plus étranges du monde quantique. Elle remet en cause notre intuition selon laquelle la matière et l’énergie seraient composées d’entités bien délimitées. Au niveau quantique, la réalité semble plutôt être un mélange subtil de particularité et d’ondulatoire.

La superposition et l’intrication quantique

Parmi les concepts les plus déroutants de la physique quantique, on trouve la superposition d’états et l’intrication quantique.

La superposition d’états signifie qu’une particule quantique peut se trouver dans une combinaison de plusieurs états en même temps, jusqu’à ce qu’elle soit mesurée. C’est comme si l’électron pouvait être à la fois ici et là, jusqu’à ce qu’on le localise.

L’intrication quantique, quant à elle, décrit le lien mystérieux qui unit certaines particules. Lorsque deux particules sont intriquées, leurs états quantiques sont corrélés, de telle sorte que l’état de l’une dépend instantanément de l’état de l’autre, et ce, quelle que soit la distance qui les sépare.

Ces phénomènes remettent profondément en cause notre vision d’un monde composé d’objets bien distincts et indépendants. Ils suggèrent que la réalité serait en fait un réseau d’interactions et de corrélations qui transcendent l’espace et le temps.

Quand la nature se révèle quantique

La photosynthèse, un processus quantique

La physique quantique ne se cantonne pas seulement au monde subatomique. Des preuves de son influence s’observent également dans les systèmes biologiques.

Par exemple, la photosynthèse, ce processus par lequel les plantes convertissent l’énergie lumineuse en énergie chimique, met en jeu des phénomènes quantiques. Des expériences ont montré que le transfert d’énergie au sein des molécules de chlorophylle se fait de manière cohérente, comme si les excitations électroniques pouvaient « sentir » le meilleur chemin à emprunter sans avoir à tous les explorer.

Ce comportement, qui relève de la superposition quantique, permet à la photosynthèse d’atteindre des rendements exceptionnels, approchant parfois les 95%. C’est une performance que les scientifiques peinent à reproduire dans les panneaux solaires artificiels.

L’émission de biophotons, une signature quantique du vivant

Une autre manifestation de la nature quantique du vivant est l’émission de biophotons par les organismes vivants. Ces photons de faible intensité, produits par diverses réactions biochimiques, semblent jouer un rôle essentiel dans la communication cellulaire et la régulation des processus biologiques.

Des études ont montré que cette émission de biophotons suit des motifs spatio-temporels complexes, avec des variations circadiennes et saisonnières. Ces propriétés, caractéristiques des phénomènes quantiques, suggèrent que les biophotons pourraient être le reflet d’une cohérence quantique au sein des systèmes vivants.

Le sens de l’orientation des oiseaux migrateurs

Un autre exemple fascinant de l’influence de la physique quantique sur le vivant est le sens de l’orientation des oiseaux migrateurs. Des recherches ont mis en évidence le rôle de la protéine cryptochrome, présente dans l’oeil de ces oiseaux, dans leur capacité à détecter le champ magnétique terrestre.

Cette protéine serait suffisamment sensible aux effets quantiques pour fonctionner comme une boussole biologique, permettant aux oiseaux de s’orienter sur de longues distances. Cela suggère que des processus quantiques pourraient être à l’œuvre dans des fonctions biologiques complexes.

Le cerveau, un ordinateur quantique ?

Vers une neurophysiologie quantique

Au-delà des systèmes biologiques, certains scientifiques pensent que la physique quantique pourrait également jouer un rôle dans le fonctionnement du cerveau humain. Des chercheurs comme John Eccles, Roger Penrose ou Stuart Hameroff ont en effet proposé que la conscience et les processus cognitifs pourraient être liés à des phénomènes quantiques au niveau des neurones et des synapses.

L’idée serait que le cerveau pourrait se comporter comme un ordinateur quantique, exploitant les propriétés étranges de la physique quantique pour traiter l’information de manière plus efficace que les ordinateurs classiques. La superposition d’états et l’intrication quantique pourraient notamment jouer un rôle dans la créativité et l’émergence de la conscience.

Les défis de la mesure en neurophysiologie quantique

Bien que séduisante, cette hypothèse d’un cerveau quantique soulève de nombreuses questions. En effet, les phénomènes quantiques sont extrêmement fragiles et sensibles à l’interaction avec l’environnement. Comment alors peuvent-ils se manifester dans un système aussi complexe et désordonné que le cerveau ?

C’est l’un des plus gros défis de la neurophysiologie quantique. Les scientifiques doivent trouver des moyens de mesurer et d’observer les processus quantiques au sein du cerveau, sans pour autant les perturber. Des progrès technologiques sont nécessaires pour relever ce défi passionnant.

Implications philosophiques et existentielles

Repenser notre vision du réel

Au-delà de ses implications scientifiques, la physique quantique soulève également des questions philosophiques fondamentales. Elle remet en cause notre conception intuitive d’un réel composé d’objets distincts et indépendants, pour nous faire envisager une réalité fondamentalement interconnectée et probabiliste.

Certains penseurs, comme le physicien David Bohm, ont même proposé que la réalité ultime serait un « ordre implicite » sous-jacent, fait de relations et de processus plutôt que d’entités séparées. Cette vision holistique du monde, où l’observateur joue un rôle essentiel, bouscule nos repères.

Implications existentielles

Cette remise en question du réel a également des implications existentielles. Si la réalité n’est plus un donné absolu, mais le résultat d’interactions complexes et d’observations, cela signifie que l’être humain n’est plus un simple spectateur du monde, mais un acteur à part entière.

Le libre-arbitre, l’incertitude et la créativité deviennent alors des éléments constitutifs de la nature humaine, au lieu d’être de simples illusions. L’être humain n’est plus un automate perdu dans un univers déterministe, mais un co-créateur de la réalité.

Conclusion : vers une vision holistique du monde

Loin de se cantonner à la physique, les enseignements de la mécanique quantique irradient aujourd’hui de nombreux domaines, de la biologie à la neurophysiologie, en passant par la philosophie. Ils nous invitent à reconsidérer fondamentalement notre vision du monde.

Au-delà des paradoxes et des énigmes qu’elle soulève, la physique quantique nous fait entrevoir une réalité profondément interconnectée, où l’observateur joue un rôle essentiel. Elle nous invite à embrasser l’incertitude et la créativité comme des attributs fondamentaux de l’Univers.

C’est une perspective holistique qui pourrait bien bouleverser notre façon de nous percevoir et de nous positionner dans le monde. Loin d’être un simple domaine de spécialistes, la physique quantique touche à des questions existentielles qui concernent chacun d’entre nous. Continuer à explorer ces mystères de l’infiniment petit, c’est aussi se réinventer soi-même.

Lire

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

30/10/2025 La réalié selon Vedral

There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

Space-time

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pno particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

Topics:

rôle essentie de a poussure dans l’univers

Many have pinpointed the birth of quantum mechanics to the small, treeless island of Helgoland, where a young Werner Heisenberg went in the summer of 1925. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

V

[Submitted on 22 Oct 2025]

Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

Chiara MarlettoVlatko Vedral

We rebut a recent paper that claims that classical gravity can entangle two massive superpositions by local means. We refute the misconceptions appearing in this paper and confirm that the quantum features are necessary in the gravitational field if it can lead to entanglement by local propagation between distant masses.

erg été 1925 co,cerant la r&li&,sz focamosr dur ce voint les obseteurs quand ils obserent et plus perticmo_rement mesures les particulesles paeticules. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

Topics:

rôle essentie de a poussu-re dans ‘univers

Many have pinpointed the birth of quantum mechanics to the small, treeless island of Helgoland, where a young Werner Heisenberg went in the summer of 1925. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

Eng espacctemps

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

Vlatko Vedral working on an entanglement experiment in the lab

Sunny Tiwari

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

V

[Submitted on 22 Oct 2025]

Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

Chiara MarlettoVlatko Vedral

We rebut a recent paper that claims that classical gravity can entangle two massive superpositions by local means. We refute the misconceptions appearing in this paper and confirm that the quantum features are necessary in the gravitational field if it can lead to entanglement by local propagation between distant masses.

erg été 1925 co,cerant la r&li&,sz focamosr dur ce voint les obseteurs quand ils obserent et plus perticmo_rement mesures les particulesles paeticules. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

Eng espacctemps

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

Vlatko Vedral working on an entanglement experiment in the lab

Sunny Tiwari

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

rse could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

V

[Submitted on 22 Oct 2025]

Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

Chiara MarlettoVlatko Vedral

We rebut a recent paper that claims that classical gravity can entangle two massive superpositions by local means. We refute the misconceptions appearing in this paper and confirm that the quantum features are necessary in the gravitational field if it can lead to entanglement by local propagation between distant masses.

erg été 1925 co,cerant la r&li&,sz focamosr dur ce voint les obseteurs quand ils obserent et plus perticmo_rement mesures les particulesles paeticules. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

Eng espacctemps

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

Vlatko Vedral working on an entanglement experiment in the lab

Sunny Tiwari

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

rôle essentie de la poussière dans l’ univers

Many have pinpointed the birth of quantum mechanics to the small, treeless island of Helgoland, where a young Werner Heisenberg went in the summer of 1925. There, he sketched out the basics of what would become our most brilliant and successful way of explaining reality. At the heart of his approach was the decision to focus exclusively on what observers would find when they measured particles.

It was a flash of genius – but it has also tied physicists up in knots for 100 years. Much of the trouble comes down to questions about what an observer is and what exactly constitutes an observation. Are we to believe that reality is somehow contingent on us looking at it?

I believe it is now time to move on from this metaphysical mess. I have thought about quantum theory for much of my career and I have come to believe we don’t need observers – it makes no sense to talk about them. There is a much more consistent and reasonable way to describe the quantum world that I would like to share with you now, together with the three clinching experiments that can prove my case.

Read more

How a quantum innovation may quash the idea of the multiverse

While this framework, in my opinion, makes a lot of logical sense, it takes us into unfamiliar territory. It’s not just observers that don’t exist – there are no particles either. And space and time? Well, we will get to them. These are deep waters, to be sure, but it is worth wading in because, as we do so, we find clues to what might lie beyond quantum theory as we know it.

To begin with, let’s take a whistle-stop tour of modern physics and the spider’s web of problems it creates. Observers were a key tenet of physics long before quantum mechanics: indeed, they played a crucial role in Albert Einstein’s development of both special and general relativity. The latter theory says that space and time are melded together in the fabric of space-time, and it is the bending of this fabric that creates gravity. I will challenge this view later, but one implication of the original idea is that observers in places where the curvature of space-time is different will experience time passing at different relative speeds.

When we teach relativity, we often talk about observers in this way, imagining them as people. But the truth is that the time experienced by any moving object (even, say, an atom) will change with respect to objects in differing gravitational fields. These differences needn’t be recorded by observation, so we don’t need a special category of “observers”.

Teachers of physics often talk about “observers”, but they may ultimately be a misleading concept

General relativity is the first of the two pillars of modern physics, the other being quantum theory itself. The essence of the theory is that reality is divided into discrete chunks at the most fundamental level. For example, when atoms take in or spit out energy, it happens in packets of a certain size, not continuously. But observers are baked into quantum theory too, because it distinguishes between particles before and after “observation”. Beforehand, we describe them using the wave function, an equation that sets out a range of possible properties – a superposition. Afterwards, this is said to “collapse” into a specific value.

The trouble is, this gives rise to all sorts of questions, the most basic of which is how and why collapse happens. It also creates paradoxes, such as Wigner’s friend, dreamed up decades ago by physicist Eugene Wigner. He imagined a “friend” inside a sealed lab making a quantum measurement while he himself waited outside. The problem comes when we compare the two people’s descriptions of reality. Wigner hasn’t observed anything, so the whole lab is described by the fuzzy wave function. Yet, for his friend, there is a definite outcome. With this paradox, Wigner was asking how we know when an observation becomes definitive.

Some physicists think we need to tweak quantum theory to deal with all this. But not me. To explain how I think about it, we need to grasp the phenomenon of entanglement, which Erwin Schrödinger called quantum theory’s “characteristic trait”. Quantum entanglement is often seen as mysterious, but it is really just a special link between two quantum objects such that when you measure one, you immediately know something about the other’s properties. Here’s the key point: when we talk about “observations”, what we are really referring to, in my opinion, is the moment two systems become entangled with each other. Although the thing that gets entangled can be a person – an “observer” – it doesn’t have to be.

The universe could vanish at any moment – why hasn’t it?

A cataclysmic quantum fluctuation could wipe out everything at any moment. The fact that we’re still here is revealing hidden cosmic realities

Let me give you an example. There is a famous experiment in which a particle of light, or photon, in superposition goes through two slits in a screen at the same time, creating an interference pattern when it hits a second screen. But if we observe which slit the photon goes through, then no interference takes place. Before you conclude that our observation collapses the superposition, bear in mind that if we entangle anything else with the photon in a way that reveals which slit it takes, we get the same effect.

So we should stop talking about “observers” and instead talk about entanglement. By the way, this view dissolves the question Wigner raised with his paradox, too. There is no “ultimate” observer – there are no observers at all. What really happens is that the system and observer (just another system) become entangled.

What I would like you to take from all this is that quantum theory already contains everything we require to understand reality. We only need to take its full implications seriously – even if they appear strange. So, let us now explore where that takes us, starting with a central idea in physics: particles.

The unreality of particles

To grapple with this concept, the first things we need to deal with are fields. A field is an entity that exists everywhere and changes over time, an idea originally introduced by Michael Faraday in the first half of the 19th century. In classical electromagnetic field theory, the electric and magnetic field values are ordinary (or classical) numbers called c-numbers, as in 5 metres. Each point in space has three electric field numbers and three magnetic field numbers assigned to it.

In quantum theory, we instead talk about quantum fields where every point in space is described not by single numbers, but instead tables of numbers. These tables are called quantum numbers or q-numbers. This is why many people take Heisenberg’s 1925 paper as the beginning of quantum physics: he was the first to propose upgrading the positions and momenta of particles to q-numbers. This difference between c-numbers and q-numbers is simple but profound – we will come back to it later.

However, not everyone is prepared to take seriously the full implications of quantum fields. When physicists took the classical electromagnetic field and quantised it, this implied the field could oscillate in more modes than was previously possible. In the quantum field, there are four of these modes and the theory predicts that the field should be able to manifest as particles, in this case photons, in each one. But here’s the weird thing: we can only ever detect photons in two of these modes. The other two cancel out and aren’t detectable, even in principle. These “ghost” photons are therefore unobservable yet unavoidable.

Philosophically troubling? Perhaps. But this isn’t unusual. Much of science works this way. We postulate things because the explanatory power of a theory would fall apart without them.

I don’t think we should sweep these oddities under the table, but should embrace them. Chiara Marletto, my colleague at the University of Oxford, and I have suggested that even though these ghosts can’t be directly detected, they should get entangled with electrons under certain circumstances and this entanglement could, in principle, be detected. As we set out in a 2023 paper, you could do this by putting an electron into a superposition, whereupon, if we are right, it should get entangled with the ghosts, and this would be detectable with the right kind of careful measurement. It is a challenging experiment, but certainly one that lies within the reach of existing technology. It would be a quantum equivalent of seeing a ghost.

Vlatko Vedral working on an entanglement experiment in the lab

Sunny Tiwari

What would it mean if this experiment showed that these ghosts can be entangled, as I fully expect it would? The most basic thing we normally think of as capable of being entangled is a particle. But ghosts can’t truly be considered particles. All they are, in truth, is q-numbers in an equation. But that, for me, is precisely the point. It is the q-numbers that are fundamental, not the human conception of a “particle”. It just so happens that particles have q-numbers, and that has misled us into thinking the former are the fundamental elements of reality, when it is actually the latter.

There is another layer of sophistication that reinforces my argument that particles aren’t real. Let’s consider an individual particle, say an electron. In the language of vanilla quantum theory, we would say that, before we measure this particle, it is in a superposition of states. It is both here and there, and both possibilities are described by q-numbers. But now change your perspective. If q-numbers are the essence of reality, these two q-numbers can be entangled with each other. Put another way, you might say that a particle in superposition can be “entangled with itself”.

Can we solve quantum theory’s biggest problem by redefining reality?

With its particles in two places at once, quantum theory strains our common sense notions of how the universe should work. But one group of physicists says we can get reality back if we just redefine its foundations

Not all physicists would accept this is possible, but more than 15 years ago, I proposed an experiment that can determine the truth, this time with my colleague Jacob Dunningham, now at the University of Sussex, UK. Take a single particle and make its state delocalised, so that it is in a superposition of two different physical locations. To experimentally verify whether the superposition is entangled, you need to make separate measurements in the two different locations and check if they violate an equation called Bell’s inequality, the hallmark of entanglement.

There is already some evidence that this single-particle entanglement occurs. Experiments conducted by Björn Hessmo at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and his colleagues in 2004 showed that individual photons split between two positions do violate Bell’s inequality. Photons, in other words, aren’t fundamental elements of reality – it is their q-numbers that matter. Still, photons are massless and no one has yet done this with an object with mass, such as an atom or even a much lighter electron, because those experiments are challenging. But there is no doubt in my mind that the outcome would be the same.

Are space and time real?

Now we are ready to talk about space and time. Some people think of this as the last frontier of physics, and it is related to the field’s biggest open problem, namely that of combining those two pillars of physics, general relativity and quantum theory, into a theory of quantum gravity. Since I have so far argued that we should think of everything as being made up of q-numbers, you might anticipate that space and time should be quantum too. Indeed, many researchers think this.

But here I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all. Like “observers”, they are convenient labels – bookkeeping devices – but there are no physical entities corresponding to them. Therefore, quantising gravity doesn’t mean quantising space-time, it means quantising the gravitational field (upgrading Einstein’s c-numbers into q-numbers) in the same way that other fields are quantised.

I take a more radical view: space and time don’t exist at all

This might seem a subtle point. After all, in general relativity, the gravitational field is thought of as being nothing more and nothing less than bending space-time. But this is where I put a twist on things: what bends isn’t space or time, but fields like the electromagnetic field that holds all matter together. Atoms, molecules, clocks and rulers are all bound by electromagnetism. The job of the gravitational field is to couple to these fields and tell them how to bend. For convenience, we talk about these fields being laid across an invisible grid we call space-time. That’s fine, but let’s not fool ourselves into thinking space-time is fundamental.

Some of my colleagues may consider this pretty extreme, and I admit it is hard to think of any experiment at present that could prove I am right. But for me, this is all part of taking quantum theory at face value. I am suggesting that gravity should be just like any other quantum field.

Along with space, time and observers, it seems that particles may not be a fundamental ingredient of reality

Pete Godfrey/Unsplash

So: no particles, no space, no time. Instead, I think the basic ingredient of nature is the q-number. To finish, let’s explore how fully embracing this principle might lead us towards new insights. What I am about to say brings to mind the story of when philosopher Bertrand Russell had a cosmology lecture interrupted by an attendee who claimed that the universe is carried on the back of a gigantic cosmic turtle. When Russell asked her what the turtle stands on, she replied: “It’s turtles all the way down!” My proposal is similar, although no turtles are involved.

When we talk about how quantum fields interact, we use a piece of mathematics called the quantum Hamiltonian. It has long bothered me that these Hamiltonians mix q-numbers with ordinary c-numbers – for example, physical constants such as the speed of light or the electron charge. This is routine, but it doesn’t seem right to me. Over the past century or so, physicists took classical equations and made some bits of them quantum. But wouldn’t it be neater, and in the spirit of the philosophy I have been espousing, if our equations were quantum through and through?

I’m not the first to think like this. In the 1980s, physicist David Deutsch proposed eliminating c-numbers altogether, making all the quantities in quantum Hamiltonians into q-numbers. Doing this, however, would have strange consequences. Let’s take just one of the possibilities and look at the speed of light, which we currently treat as a simple c-number. If we turned this into a q-number – which, remember, always describes a point in a quantum field – this would imply that there is some new quantum field connected to the speed of light. It would be a bit like what happened when we quantised the electromagnetic field and got those pesky ghosts, a suggestion that there is more to reality than we thought.

We’ve discovered a door to a hidden part of reality – what’s inside?

Physicists would dearly love to find new particles, but there’s no sign of them in colliders like the LHC. Now we have found a new way of accessing a tiny slice of reality where they might be hiding

This general idea can be subjected to experiment. If there are extra quantum fields out there, particles should be capable of becoming entangled with them. Imagine, for example, you maximally entangle an atom and a photon. If there is another field out there that mediates this interaction, it should join the party and create a three-body entangled system. The result would be that the strength of the entanglement between the photon and the atom would be weaker than expected. In 2022, Jim Franson at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, proposed one method for detecting this entanglement – it is conceptually quite similar to the experiment I imagined for detecting the ghosts. No one has performed this so far, but it is technologically possible.

In principle, we could imagine taking quantisation to an even deeper level. Q-numbers are tables of numbers, and you could easily “upgrade” all of the ordinary numbers in those tables to be q-numbers themselves – and then do the same again. Tables of tables of tables. In this view, it isn’t turtles, but rather q-numbers, all the way down.

Philosophers hate infinite regress. But nature is under no obligation to respect our philosophical scruples. The universe may simply be a bottomless pit, offering physicists an inexhaustible supply of mysteries.

[2510.19969] Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

Classical Gravity Cannot Mediate Entanglement by Local Means

Chiara MarlettoVlatko Vedral

We rebut a recent paper that claims that classical gravity can entangle two massive superpositions by local means. We refute the misconceptions appearing in this paper and confirm that the quantum features are necessary in the gravitational field if it can lead to entanglement by local propagation between distant masses.

Sécouverte d’une nouvelle espèce d’hommes inconnus

sis a été une étape significative dans l’étude de l’évolution humaine. Cette nouvelle espèce, qui aurait vécu en Asie de l’Est il y a environ 300 000 ans, pourrait enrichir notre compréhension des anciens hominidés ayant partagé notre planète. 

Les fossiles découverts dans les années 1970, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu, et d’autres sites en Chine, ont été analysés par des paléoanthropologues pour identifier une nouvelle espèce, Homo juluensis, qui pourrait être intermédiaire entre les hominidés les plus primitifs et les plus modernes

. Les crânes de ces hominidés sont particulièrement grands, avec une capacité crânienne estimée de 1 700 à 1 800 centimètres cubes, ce qui les distingue des espèces connues comme les Néandertaliens et Homo sapiens. Cette classification pourrait également les rapprocher des Dénisoviens, qui sont connus pour leurs crânes de grande taille et leurs caractéristiques dentaires uniques. 

Aujourd’hui, Homo sapiens est la seule espèce humaine qui habite l’ensemble de la planète. Mais il y a encore à peine 50 000 ans, elle coexistait avec d’autres hominines, comme les Néandertaliens dont la présence s’étend jusqu’en Eurasie et les Dénisoviens qui seraient allés jusqu’en Asie de l’Est.

Ces dernières années, de nouvelles espèces humaines ont été identifiées en Asie de l’Est et en Asie du Sud-Est. C’est le cas de Homo floresiensis qui a été créé en 2004 à partir de restes fossiles découverts en Indonésie, Homo luzonensis, dont les restes ont été trouvés dans les Philippines et classifiés en 2019, ou encore Homo longi, créé en 2021 à partir d’un crâne retrouvé en 1933 dans la ville de Harbin, en Chine.

Plus récemment, en 2024, une étude publiée dans la revue Nature communications propose une nouvelle classification des fossiles découverts en Chine et mentionne ce qui semble être une nouvelle espèce : Homo juluensis. Une proposition qui laisse perplexe…
 

Qu’y a-t-il derrière cette nouvelle terminologie ? À quoi renvoie Homo juluensis ?

Dans les années 1970, de nombreux restes fossiles ont été découverts au Nord de la Chine, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu etc. Cet assemblage fossile comprend uniquement des éléments crâniens, c’est-à-dire des crânes, des dents et des mandibules, dont les dimensions étaient particulièrement énormes comparé à Homo sapiens.

Les scientifiques se sont trouvés face à des morphologies inédites qui ne correspondaient à aucune espèce connue. Ils n’ont donc pas pu les attribuer à une espèce en particulier.

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès.
 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils une espèce publique ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

Pour résumer, pourquoi Homo juluensis pourrait ne pas être considéré comme une nouvelle espèce ?

Parce que là, en l’occurrence, il n’est pas publié selon les standards scientifiques actuels. En effet, l’article publié dans la revue Nature communications renvoie à un livre que l’un des auteurs a écrit récemment. Or, cet ouvrage n’est a priori pas passé en relecture auprès des pairs : ils n’ont pas pu examiner les arguments en faveur de cette publication.

En plus, jusqu’à présent, les collègues y étaient plutôt défavorables pour les raisons que nous avons évoquées : l’assemblage n’est pas clairement identifié (par exemple, les Dénisoviens avaient déjà été inclus en 2021 dans l’espèce Homo longi) et les scientifiques ne savent pas encore comment interpréter cette grande diversité morphologique. Même le nom donné à cette espèce ne semble pas être aux normes puisqu’elle combine un attribut physique (julu, voulant dire « grosse tête ») au suffixe –ensis.

Florent Détroit

Paléoanthropologue et professeur au Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle (Histoire Naturelle des Humanités Préhistoriques – UMR 7194)

Sciencepost+5

Archaeology News Online Magazine+5

The discovery of Homo juluensis has provided a new perspective on the diversity of ancient human species that coexisted in eastern Asia during the Late Pleistocene. This species, which lived approximately 300,000 years ago and disappeared around 50,000 years ago, is characterized by a mix of features found in fossils from sites such as Xujiayao and Xuchang in northern and central China. The fossils include large crania with thick skulls, traits reminiscent of Neanderthals, as well as characteristics shared with modern humans and Denisovans. Homo juluensis is thought to have been skilled in making stone tools, processing animal hides, and hunting wild horses, which likely contributed to their survival in challenging environments. The discovery of Homo juluensis builds on decades of research into Asia’s hominin fossil record and suggests that eastern Asia hosted at least four distinct hominin species: Homo floresiensis, Homo luzonensis, Homo longi, and the newly named Homo juluensis. 

Archaeology News Online Magazine+5

Magazine+5

The research team emphasized that naming Homo juluensis is not merely about taxonomy but about improving science communication. “This study clarifies a hominin fossil record that has tended to include anything that cannot easily be assigned to Homo erectus, Homo neanderthalensis, or Homo sapiens,” Bae explained in a press release. “Ultimately, this should help with science communication.”

In a commentary in Nature Communications, Bae and Wu highlighted the importance of new terminology for understanding evolutionary models. “Thanks largely to a growing hominin fossil record, the field of Late Quaternary eastern Asian paleoanthropology is contributing tremendously to how we view and refine these models,” they wrote.

Homo juluensis challenges unilineal evolutionary models. According to the researchers, the eastern Asian fossil record underscores the need to revise traditional interpretations of human evolution to reflect the diversity and hybridization events revealed by recent findings. The discovery of Homo juluensis marks a significant step forward in unraveling the intricate web of human ancestry.

More information: Bae, C.J., Wu, X. (2024). Making sense of eastern Asian Late Quaternary hominin variability. Nat Commun 15, 9479. doi:10.1038/s41467-024-53918-7

Homo juluensis : une nouvelle espèce humaine ?

15 janvier 2025

Depuis les années 1970, de nombreux fossiles humains ont été découverts au nord de la Chine. Alors que ces restes ne sont pas encore identifiés, deux chercheurs ont proposé de les rassembler sous l’appellation « Homo juluensis ». Une proposition qui laisse perplexe. On en parle avec Florent Détroit, paléoanthropologue et co-découvreur de Homo luzonensis.

Aujourd’hui, Homo sapiens est la seule espèce humaine qui habite l’ensemble de la planète. Mais il y a encore à peine 50 000 ans, elle coexistait avec d’autres hominines, comme les Néandertaliens dont la présence s’étend jusqu’en Eurasie et les Dénisoviens qui seraient allés jusqu’en Asie de l’Est.

Ces dernières années, de nouvelles espèces humaines ont été identifiées en Asie de l’Est et en Asie du Sud-Est. C’est le cas de Homo floresiensis qui a été créé en 2004 à partir de restes fossiles découverts en Indonésie, Homo luzonensis, dont les restes ont été trouvés dans les Philippines et classifiés en 2019, ou encore Homo longi, créé en 2021 à partir d’un crâne retrouvé en 1933 dans la ville de Harbin, en Chine.

Plus récemment, en 2024, une étude publiée dans la revue Nature communications propose une nouvelle classification des fossiles découverts en Chine et mentionne ce qui semble être une nouvelle espèce : Homo juluensis. Une proposition qui laisse perplexe…
 

Qu’y a-t-il derrière cette nouvelle terminologie ? À quoi renvoie Homo juluensis ?

Dans les années 1970, de nombreux restes fossiles ont été découverts au Nord de la Chine, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu etc. Cet assemblage fossile comprend uniquement des éléments crâniens, c’est-à-dire des crânes, des dents et des mandibules, dont les dimensions étaient particulièrement énormes comparé à Homo sapiens.

Les scientifiques se sont trouvés face à des morphologies inédites qui ne correspondaient à aucune espèce connue. Ils n’ont donc pas pu les attribuer à une espèce en particulier.

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès.
 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils compte de la découverte d’une nouvelle espècre ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

28/10/2025. Découverte d’une nouvelle espèce d’humains

La découverte de Homo juluensis a été une étape significative dans l’étude de l’évolution humaine. Cette nouvelle espèce, qui aurait vécu en Asie de l’Est il y a environ 300 000 ans, pourrait enrichir notre compréhension des anciens hominidés ayant partagé notre planète. 

Les fossiles découverts dans les années 1970, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu, et d’autres sites en Chine, ont été analysés par des paléoanthropologues pour identifier une nouvelle espèce, Homo juluensis, qui pourrait être intermédiaire entre les hominidés les plus primitifs et les plus modernes

. Les crânes de ces hominidés sont particulièrement grands, avec une capacité crânienne estimée de 1 700 à 1 800 centimètres cubes, ce qui les distingue des espèces connues comme les Néandertaliens et Homo sapiens. Cette classification pourrait également les rapprocher des Dénisoviens, qui sont connus pour leurs crânes de grande taille et leurs caractéristiques dentaires uniques. 

Aujourd’hui, Homo sapiens est la seule espèce humaine qui habite l’ensemble de la planète. Mais il y a encore à peine 50 000 ans, elle coexistait avec d’autres hominines, comme les Néandertaliens dont la présence s’étend jusqu’en Eurasie et les Dénisoviens qui seraient allés jusqu’en Asie de l’Est.

Ces dernières années, de nouvelles espèces humaines ont été identifiées en Asie de l’Est et en Asie du Sud-Est. C’est le cas de Homo floresiensis qui a été créé en 2004 à partir de restes fossiles découverts en Indonésie, Homo luzonensis, dont les restes ont été trouvés dans les Philippines et classifiés en 2019, ou encore Homo longi, créé en 2021 à partir d’un crâne retrouvé en 1933 dans la ville de Harbin, en Chine.

Plus récemment, en 2024, une étude publiée dans la revue Nature communications propose une nouvelle classification des fossiles découverts en Chine et mentionne ce qui semble être une nouvelle espèce : Homo juluensis. Une proposition qui laisse perplexe…
 

Qu’y a-t-il derrière cette nouvelle terminologie ? 

À quoi renvoie Homo juluensis ? Dans les années 1970, de nombreux restes fossiles ont été découverts au Nord de la Chine, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu etc. Cet assemblage fossile comprend uniquement des éléments crâniens, c’est-à-dire des crânes, des dents et des mandibules, dont les dimensions étaient particulièrement énormes comparé à Homo sapiens.

Les scientifiques se sont trouvés face à des morphologies inédites qui ne correspondaient à aucune espèce connue. Ils n’ont donc pas pu les attribuer à une espèce en particulier.

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès.
 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils une espèce publique ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

Pour résumer, pourquoi Homo juluensis pourrait ne pas être considéré comme une nouvelle espèce ?

Parce que là, en l’occurrence, il n’est pas publié selon les standards scientifiques actuels. En effet, l’article publié dans la revue Nature communications renvoie à un livre que l’un des auteurs a écrit récemment. Or, cet ouvrage n’est a priori pas passé en relecture auprès des pairs : ils n’ont pas pu examiner les arguments en faveur de cette publication.

En plus, jusqu’à présent, les collègues y étaient plutôt défavorables pour les raisons que nous avons évoquées : l’assemblage n’est pas clairement identifié (par exemple, les Dénisoviens avaient déjà été inclus en 2021 dans l’espèce Homo longi) et les scientifiques ne savent pas encore comment interpréter cette grande diversité morphologique. Même le nom donné à cette espèce ne semble pas être aux normes puisqu’elle combine un attribut physique (julu, voulant dire « grosse tête ») au suffixe –ensis.

Entretien avec Florent Détroit

Paléoanthropologue et professeur au Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle (Histoire Naturelle des Humanités Préhistoriques – UMR 7194)

Sciencepost+5

Archaeology News Online Magazine+5

The discovery of Homo juluensis has provided a new perspective on the diversity of ancient human species that coexisted in eastern Asia during the Late Pleistocene. This species, which lived approximately 300,000 years ago and disappeared around 50,000 years ago, is characterized by a mix of features found in fossils from sites such as Xujiayao and Xuchang in northern and central China. The fossils include large crania with thick skulls, traits reminiscent of Neanderthals, as well as characteristics shared with modern humans and Denisovans. Homo juluensis is thought to have been skilled in making stone tools, processing animal hides, and hunting wild horses, which likely contributed to their survival in challenging environments. The discovery of Homo juluensis builds on decades of research into Asia’s hominin fossil record and suggests that eastern Asia hosted at least four distinct hominin species: Homo floresiensis, Homo luzonensis, Homo longi, and the newly named Homo juluensis. 

Archaeology News Online Magazine+5

Magazine+5

The research team emphasized that naming Homo juluensis is not merely about taxonomy but about improving science communication. “This study clarifies a hominin fossil record that has tended to include anything that cannot easily be assigned to Homo erectus, Homo neanderthalensis, or Homo sapiens,” Bae explained in a press release. “Ultimately, this should help with science communication.”

In a commentary in Nature Communications, Bae and Wu highlighted the importance of new terminology for understanding evolutionary models. “Thanks largely to a growing hominin fossil record, the field of Late Quaternary eastern Asian paleoanthropology is contributing tremendously to how we view and refine these models,” they wrote.

Homo juluensis challenges unilineal evolutionary models. According to the researchers, the eastern Asian fossil record underscores the need to revise traditional interpretations of human evolution to reflect the diversity and hybridization events revealed by recent findings. The discovery of Homo juluensis marks a significant step forward in unraveling the intricate web of human ancestry.

More information: Bae, C.J., Wu, X. (2024). Making sense of eastern Asian Late Quaternary hominin variability. Nat Commun 15, 9479. doi:10.1038/s41467-024-53918-7

Homo juluensis : une nouvelle espèce humaine ?

15 janvier 2025

Depuis les années 1970, de nombreux fossiles humains ont été découverts au nord de la Chine. Alors que ces restes ne sont pas encore identifiés, deux chercheurs ont proposé de les rassembler sous l’appellation « Homo juluensis ». Une proposition qui laisse perplexe. On en parle avec Florent Détroit, paléoanthropologue et co-découvreur de Homo luzonensis.

Aujourd’hui, Homo sapiens est la seule espèce humaine qui habite l’ensemble de la planète. Mais il y a encore à peine 50 000 ans, elle coexistait avec d’autres hominines, comme les Néandertaliens dont la présence s’étend jusqu’en Eurasie et les Dénisoviens qui seraient allés jusqu’en Asie de l’Est.

Ces dernières années, de nouvelles espèces humaines ont été identifiées en Asie de l’Est et en Asie du Sud-Est. C’est le cas de Homo floresiensis qui a été créé en 2004 à partir de restes fossiles découverts en Indonésie, Homo luzonensis, dont les restes ont été trouvés dans les Philippines et classifiés en 2019, ou encore Homo longi, créé en 2021 à partir d’un crâne retrouvé en 1933 dans la ville de Harbin, en Chine.

Plus récemment, en 2024, une étude publiée dans la revue Nature communications propose une nouvelle classification des fossiles découverts en Chine et mentionne ce qui semble être une nouvelle espèce : Homo juluensis. Une proposition qui laisse perplexe…
 

Qu’y a-t-il derrière cette nouvelle terminologie ? À quoi renvoie Homo juluensis ?

Dans les années 1970, de nombreux restes fossiles ont été découverts au Nord de la Chine, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu etc. Cet assemblage fossile comprend uniquement des éléments crâniens, c’est-à-dire des crânes, des dents et des mandibules, dont les dimensions étaient particulièrement énormes comparé à Homo sapiens.

Les scientifiques se sont trouvés face à des morphologies inédites qui ne correspondaient à aucune espèce connue. Ils n’ont donc pas pu les attribuer à une espèce en particulier.

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès.
 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils une espèce publique ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

27/10/2025. Déouverte de Homo juluensis

La découverte de Homo juluensis a été une étape significative dans l’étude de l’évolution humaine. Cette nouvelle espèce, qui aurait vécu en Asie de l’Est il y a environ 300 000 ans, pourrait enrichir notre compréhension des anciens hominidés ayant partagé notre planète. 

Les fossiles découverts dans les années 1970, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu, et d’autres sites en Chine, ont été analysés par des paléoanthropologues pour identifier une nouvelle espèce, Homo juluensis, qui pourrait être intermédiaire entre les hominidés les plus primitifs et les plus modernes

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès. 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils une espèce publique ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

Pour résumer, pourquoi Homo juluensis pourrait ne pas être considéré comme une nouvelle espèce ?

Parce que là, en l’occurrence, il n’est pas publié selon les standards scientifiques actuels. En effet, l’article publié dans la revue Nature communications renvoie à un livre que l’un des auteurs a écrit récemment. Or, cet ouvrage n’est a priori pas passé en relecture auprès des pairs : ils n’ont pas pu examiner les arguments en faveur de cette publication.

En plus, jusqu’à présent, les collègues y étaient plutôt défavorables pour les raisons que nous avons évoquées : l’assemblage n’est pas clairement identifié (par exemple, les Dénisoviens avaient déjà été inclus en 2021 dans l’espèce Homo longi) et les scientifiques ne savent pas encore comment interpréter cette grande diversité morphologique. Même le nom donné à cette espèce ne semble pas être aux normes puisqu’elle combine un attribut physique (julu, voulant dire « grosse tête ») au suffixe –ensis.

La découverte de Homo juluensis a été une étape significative dans l’étude de l’évolution humaine. Cette nouvelle espèce, qui aurait vécu en Asie de l’Est il y a environ 300 000 ans, pourrait enrichir notre compréhension des anciens hominidés ayant partagé notre planète. 

Les fossiles découverts dans les années 1970, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu, et d’autres sites en Chine, ont été analysés par des paléoanthropologues pour identifier une nouvelle espèce, Homo juluensis, qui pourrait être intermédiaire entre les hominidés les plus primitifs et les plus modernes

. Les crânes de ces hominidés sont particulièrement grands, avec une capacité crânienne estimée de 1 700 à 1 800 centimètres cubes, ce qui les distingue des espèces connues comme les Néandertaliens et Homo sapiens. Cette classification pourrait également les rapprocher des Dénisoviens, qui sont connus pour leurs crânes de grande taille et leurs caractéristiques dentaires uniques. 

Aujourd’hui, Homo sapiens est la seule espèce humaine qui habite l’ensemble de la planète. Mais il y a encore à peine 50 000 ans, elle coexistait avec d’autres hominines, comme les Néandertaliens dont la présence s’étend jusqu’en Eurasie et les Dénisoviens qui seraient allés jusqu’en Asie de l’Est.

Ces dernières années, de nouvelles espèces humaines ont été identifiées en Asie de l’Est et en Asie du Sud-Est. C’est le cas de Homo floresiensis qui a été créé en 2004 à partir de restes fossiles découverts en Indonésie, Homo luzonensis, dont les restes ont été trouvés dans les Philippines et classifiés en 2019, ou encore Homo longi, créé en 2021 à partir d’un crâne retrouvé en 1933 dans la ville de Harbin, en Chine.

Plus récemment, en 2024, une étude publiée dans la revue Nature communications propose une nouvelle classification des fossiles découverts en Chine et mentionne ce qui semble être une nouvelle espèce : Homo juluensis. Une proposition qui laisse perplexe…
 

Qu’y a-t-il derrière cette nouvelle terminologie ? À quoi renvoie Homo juluensis ?

Dans les années 1970, de nombreux restes fossiles ont été découverts au Nord de la Chine, notamment à Xujiayao, Xuchang, Xiahe, Penghu etc. Cet assemblage fossile comprend uniquement des éléments crâniens, c’est-à-dire des crânes, des dents et des mandibules, dont les dimensions étaient particulièrement énormes comparé à Homo sapiens.

Les scientifiques se sont trouvés face à des morphologies inédites qui ne correspondaient à aucune espèce connue. Ils n’ont donc pas pu les attribuer à une espèce en particulier.

Les chercheurs à l’origine de l’article publié en 2024 ont alors repris les études précédentes et créé Homo juluensis à partir de cet assemblage. Cette démarche les a conduit à diviser les fossiles d’Asie de l’Est et du Sud-Est datés de 300 000 à 50 000 ans en quatre groupes : Homo floresiensisHomo luzonensisHomo longi et Homo juluensis.

Et comme ces fossiles ont des caractéristiques morphologiques similaires aux Dénisoviens, notamment des « molaires assez grandes », ils les ont associés à ces hominines. Sauf que, d’un point de vue morphologique, on ne connaît pas suffisamment bien les Dénisoviens.

En fin de compte, l’assemblage de restes fossiles découvert en Chine n’est toujours pas clairement identifié, c’est-à-dire qu’on ne sait pas vraiment si Homo juluensis est bien une nouvelle espèce. En effet, elle a été décrite et publiée dans un livre (et non un article de revue scientifique comme cela se fait normalement) auquel peu de chercheurs ont eu pour l’instant accès.
 

Comment les scientifiques rendent-ils une espèce publique ? Quel est le processus de publication ?

La démarche de publication doit respecter un certain nombre de critères. En paléontologie, cela signifie que les fossiles doivent être homogènes entre eux et qu’ils ne correspondent à aucune autre espèce déjà connue.
 
Les noms scientifiques des espèces doivent aussi respecter les règles du Code international de nomenclature zoologique. Ils peuvent faire référence à un nom de lieu (avec le suffixe latin –ensis qui signifie « qui vient de »), un attribut particulier (c’est le cas de Homo habilisHomo erectus et Homo sapiens) ou un nom de personne.

Enfin, la démarche doit être examinée par les pairs. Autrement dit, ce sont des collègues scientifiques qui évaluent la pertinence de la publication. Pour Homo luzonensis, par exemple, nous avons eu quatre relecteurs. Ils rédigent un rapport d’expertise avec des recommandations et, le cas échéant, des demandes de modifications de l’article puis, in fine, valident ou non la publication d’une nouvelle espèce.
 

Pour résumer, pourquoi Homo juluensis pourrait ne pas être considéré comme une nouvelle espèce ?

Parce que là, en l’occurrence, il n’est pas publié selon les standards scientifiques actuels. En effet, l’article publié dans la revue Nature communications renvoie à un livre que l’un des auteurs a écrit récemment. Or, cet ouvrage n’est a priori pas passé en relecture auprès des pairs : ils n’ont pas pu examiner les arguments en faveur de cette publication.

En plus, jusqu’à présent, les collègues y étaient plutôt défavorables pour les raisons que nous avons évoquées : l’assemblage n’est pas clairement identifié (par exemple, les Dénisoviens avaient déjà été inclus en 2021 dans l’espèce Homo longi) et les scientifiques ne savent pas encore comment interpréter cette grande diversité morphologique. Même le nom donné à cette espèce ne semble pas être aux normes puisqu’elle

27/10/2025 La poussière dans la formation et l’évolution de l’univers visible

En analysants les données collctées par ALMA, abréviation de Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array-un scientifiques ont pu observer des nuages de poussière dans des galaxies lointaines. Ils ont examiné 33 clusters de galaxies pour comprendre comment la poussière change avec la distance, la masse des étoiles et la vitesse à laquelle les étoiles se forment.

Après avoir analysé ces données, les chercheurs ont découvert que la plupart des galaxies montraient de la poussière. Même si certaines n’en avaient pas, la majorité en avait. Comme prévu compte tenu de la distance, ils ont remarqué une diminution régulière de la quantité de poussière en regardant plus loin dans le temps. Fait intéressant, les galaxies avec plus d’étoiles et celles qui formaient des étoiles plus rapidement avaient plus de poussière.

Dans la suite de leurs études,e, les chercheurs ont réalisé qu’à travers l’univers, la poussière se comporte de manière prévisible. Elle s’accumule quand des étoiles naissent mais change constamment à mesure que les galaxies évoluent. Tout comme une garde-robe grandit avec de nouveaux vêtements, les galaxies collectent plus de poussière à mesure qu’elles grandissent et vieillissent.

En mesurant les quantités de poussière dans différents groupes, les chercheurs ont pu prendre du recul et regarder l’image cosmique dans son ensemble. Ils ont remarqué que la quantité totale de poussière atteignait un pic à certains moments et commençait ensuite à diminuer.

Le rôle de la lentille

Dans ce contexte, la lentille signifie que les scientifiques ont utilisé la gravité de galaxies massives pour aider à focaliser leurs observations, rendant plus facile le repérage de la poussière faible. Cette technique permet d’explorer encore plus de galaxies faibles sans avoir à attendre une éternité pour recueillir assez de signaux.

Comprendre les résultats

Les résultats ont confirmé certaines idées et remis en question d’autres. Par exemple, les chercheurs ont trouvé une connexion constante entre la formation d’étoiles et les quantités de poussière, montrant qu’à mesure que les galaxies accumulent plus d’étoiles, elles accumulent aussi de la poussière.

L’effet de décalage vers le rouge

On a aussi appris que la quantité de poussière diminue avec la distance. En regardant plus loin dans le temps, les chercheurs ont trouvé moins de poussière, un peu comme tu pourrais trouver moins de bonbons au fond du pot à bonbons. Donc, si tu trouves que repérer la poussière est difficile, essaie de la trouver là où elle était avant !

Examiner les résultats et les directions futures

L’équipe a examiné comment la poussière change selon les taux de formation d’étoiles et la masse aussi. Ils ont réalisé que la poussière se comporte d’une manière quelque peu prévisible mais avec des exceptions. Ce n’est pas toujours une ligne droite, ce qui reflète la nature chaotique des galaxies elles-mêmes.

Conclusion

étudier la poussière des galaxies, c’est comme assembler un puzzle cosmique. Les observations faites montrent peignent un tableau de la façon dont les galaxies évoluent et interagissent. La poussière est un joueur silencieux dans le jeu galactique, façonnant comment les étoiles se forment et comment on voit l’univers.

26/10/2025 Perspectives du calcul quantique dans les dix ans.

The Quantum Landscape

In total, quantum computing ranked fourth on our list of impactful new tech, behind only AI for security operations (58.7%), private 5G networking (53.9%) and generative AI (52.6%). In all, 79% of survey respondents believe quantum computing will have a notable impact on their organization within the next three years.

Barriers, roadmaps and next steps

While quantum computing has come a long way in the past decade, the technology is still developing. Quantum computers are in a noisy, intermediate state that International Business Machines Corp. has dubbed the « era of quantum utility. » This is in contrast with the long-anticipated « era of quantum advantage, » in which quantum computers and their associated systems are powerful enough to consistently surpass classical computation techniques.

To reach this stage, quantum computers need to address two key barriers: scale and consistency. Because of the constraints of quantum computing, scaling up the size of a quantum computer can be incredibly difficult. Some only operate at super-cold temperatures, while other architectures rely on complex systems of lasers to hold individual atoms in place, making larger systems exponentially more difficult to build.

Although some architectures may be better suited to scaling up quantum computers in an efficient way, today’s largest computers are currently operating at around 1,000 qubits — much smaller than will be needed for the computational powerhouses of the future. Many vendors have published timelines for the anticipated scale-up of their quantum systems, with IBM anticipating the rollout of a 100,000-qubit system in 2033. In the interim, there has been a substantial push to develop hybrid computation techniques, where early quantum computers collaborate with classical computing systems to solve certain algorithms.

Size is not the only issue that must be overcome. In quantum computing, atomic particles must be held in place long enough for calculations to be run. Coherence time, the length of time that a qubit can be manipulated, matters substantially in the overall effectiveness of a quantum system. Other considerations, including system noisiness and faulty gates or measurements, will necessitate quantum error correction — essentially the ability to account for and overcome errors while running an algorithm on a quantum computer. Error correction is included on most quantum computing roadmaps, with IBM planning to introduce an intermediary error mitigation technique in its 2024 system and aiming to solve error correction by 2029.

Beyond the improvements in hardware, there is also work to be done in the buildout of developer tools designed to democratize access to quantum computing. Interacting with a quantum computer requires working with quantum-specific programming languages (Q#, Cirq, Qiskit), and given the current shortage of quantum computing experts, there will likely need to be an upswing in software platforms built to make quantum computing accessible to a wider range of programmers.

As with any new technology, more growth is expected and more innovation is yet to come. The quantum landscape today looks markedly different from that seen 10, or even five, years ago. While it is impossible to predict the future, the next five years should see the quantum landscape continue to evolve out of early commercialization into a robust and powerful market.

This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.
451 Research is a technology research group within S&P Global Market Intelligence. For more about 451 Research, please contact.

La France, dans le cadre de sa politique de défense devra-t-elle choisir entre s’équiper de drones militaires ou se doter d’un deuxième porte-avion?

Aujourd’hui, la famille des drones militaires est subdivisée en sous-catégories selon la vitesse, le rayon d’action et les fonctions :(source wikiperdia )

– les drones volant à haute altitude et de grande endurance appelés HALE (pour « High Altitude Long Endurance »); – les drones de combat, encore appelés UCAV (pour « Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle »)


– les drones cible servant de cibles pour les avions de chasse et les missiles surface-air ;

– certains drones peuvent emporter des petites charges destinées à être livrées à des combattants sur le champ de bataille, en mode drone de transport

-le drone leurre, servant à tromper et dévier un missile ;

  • les drones suicide qui explosent à l’impact ou sur commande ;
  • des véhicules automatisés de transport, qui semblent en préparation, y compris pour le transport des personnels; et qui pourraient aussi être utilisés pour le sauvetage en mer.
  • Engins volants de taille réduite, moins chers et plus simples à mettre en œuvre qu’un avion (la présence d’un pilote imposant une dimension à un appareil habité, le dispositif d’éjection représentant à lui seul une masse supérieure à celle d’un Predator), ils sont plus discrets et leur perte est moins grave que celle d’un appareil et de son pilote. Ils représentent une alternative pour les pays dont le budget est limité et également pour des terroristes potentiels (étatiques ou non), des contrebandiers ou des trafiquants de stupéfiants.

Leur taille varie de quelques centimètres à plusieurs dizaines de mètres (près de 40 mètres d’envergure pour un Global Hawk). Leur forme également, tout comme leur type de propulsion : certains sont équipés de réacteurs, d’autres d’hélices (tricoptères, quadricoptères, hexacoptères, octocoptères voire multicoptères ; selon le nombre d’hélices), quand d’autres utilisent des rotors (on les dénomme parfois multirotors, tels les quadrirotors) à l’instar des hélicoptères (appelés UAR, pour « Unmanned Aerial Rotorcraft »).

Applications

Les progrès informatiques et technologiques ont fait de certains drones des plateformes de désignation de cible ou des armes. Ils servent aussi au recueil de renseignements et à la guerre électronique (pour le brouillage ou l’interception des communications). Leurs missions font alors partie de l’ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance et Reconnaissance) ou l’ISTAR (pour « Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance ».

Leurs applications militaires à fins civiles civiles incluent le contrôle du trafic routier ou des foules, la surveillance maritime[10] et environnementale[11], les opérations de recherche aérienne et de sauvetage, la récolte de données d’intérêt météorologique ou les opérations en environnement difficile, par exemple en zone de risque NRBC (« Nucléaire, Radiologique, Bactériologique et Chimique »), le relais d’informations, la prise de photographies aériennes voire, bientôt, l’acquisition directe de données photogrammétriques.

Certains sont des démonstrateurs technologiques qui valident à moindre coût, grâce à la réduction d’échelle et donc la quantité de matériaux nécessaires, des formules aérodynamiques ou certains équipements, sans risquer la vie d’un pilote d’essai. Ils permettent aussi d’atteindre les limites d’un appareil en dépassant celles que pourrait supporter un pilote, afin d’en confirmer la solidité.

D’autres, les « AAV » (pour « Autonomous Aerial Vehicle ») sont dotés d’une capacité d’autonomie décisionnelle embarquée. Tout engin peut en être équipé dans la mesure où il n’a pas de pilote embarqué. Les « drones terrestres » (utilisés, notamment, pour l’inspection de véhicules ou d’environnements à risque), marins, sous-marins et même souterrains, répondent ainsi à cette définition.

La classification des drones aérins militaire varie selon le contexte et les pays. Ils aériens peuvent être classés selon plusieurs critères :

La différence entre drone tactique et drone MALE tient avant tout à l’usage que l’on en fait, notamment le caractère furtif ou non 

24/10/2025 La Théorie quantique des champs. Essai d’interprétation

La théorie quantique des champs (TQC) est une approche en physique théorique qui unifie la mécanique quantique et la relativité restreinte pour décrire les interactions entre penr tqr tqurarticules élémentaires. Elle a été développée au milieu du XXe siècle par des physiciens tels que Dirac, Feynman et Schwinger, et elle est fondamentale pour comprendre les forces  de la nature, y compris la gravité quantique.
La TQC utilise des champs quantiques pour modéliser les interactions, où les particules sont considérées comme excitations de ces champs. Cette théorie est essentielle pour la physique des particules moderne et a des implications variées, allant de la physique des hautes énergies aux applications technologiques avancées. 

Wikipedia+5

Pour en savoir plus

Dans le monde de la physique, on entend souvent parler de diverses théories qui essaient d’expliquer l’univers à son niveau le plus basique. Parmi ces théories, il y a la théorie des champs quantiques (TQF), qui s’occupe des particules et de leurs interactions. Un des aspects intriguants de ce domaine, c’est l’étude des Défauts-ce sont des interruptions ou des changements dans le comportement normal d’un champ ou d’un matériau, un peu comme une rayure sur un disque vinyle peut perturber le flux musical. Ces défauts aident les chercheurs à comprendre des phénomènes compliqués de manière plus claire

#Quels sont les défauts ?

On peut penser aux défauts comme des objets ou des points dans un champ qui modifient son comportement. Imaginez une route bien lisse qui a soudainement un trou. La route a l’air superbe, mais le trou oblige les voitures à faire des zigzags. De la même manière, les défauts en physique changent la façon dont les particules interagissent ou comment l’énergie circule dans un système. Ils peuvent prendre différentes formes, comme des cordes ou des points, et sont devenus un domaine d’intérêt clé ces dernières années.

#La Dynamique des défauts

#Les symétries et leur rôle

La symétrie est un concept qu’on trouve dans la nature-les choses symétriques ont souvent l’air plus équilibrées et esthétiques. En physique, les symétries aident les chercheurs à simplifier des problèmes complexes. En étudiant les défauts, les gens s’intéressent particulièrement à la façon dont les symétries changent quand des défauts sont présents. Ça peut donner des indices sur la nature de ces défauts et leur importance dans le cadre plus large des théories physiques.

#Types de défauts

Les défauts peuvent être classés en plusieurs types, selon la façon dont ils interagissent avec les champs autour d’eux. Voici quelques types courants :

  • Défauts de point : Ces défauts se produisent à un point précis dans l’espace et peuvent représenter un changement d’énergie ou de charge.
  • Défauts de ligne : Pensez à un défaut de ligne comme une interruption longue et fine dans un champ. Çela pourrait être similaire à une fissure qui traverse une route.
  • Défauts de surface : Ces défauts s’étendent sur une plus grande zone et peuvent affecter une large région de l’espace, agissant comme une barrière ou une limite.

Chaque type de défaut révèle des propriétés et des comportements uniques au sein d’un système.

#Le concept d’Anomalies

Les anomalies font référence à des comportements ou des résultats inattendus qui s’écartent de la norme. Tout comme une pluie soudaine peut perturber un pique-nique, les anomalies peuvent révéler de nouvelles insights sur les systèmes étudiés. Dans le domaine de la TQF, les défauts peuvent présenter des anomalies qui fournissent des indices sur la physique sous-jacente en jeu. Ces anomalies signalent souvent une connexion plus profonde entre différents aspects d’une théorie.

Explorer les interactions

Les chercheurs étudient comment les défauts interagissent avec les champs et les particules environnantes pour gagner des insights sur leur comportement. En comprenant ces interactions, ils peuvent mieux prédire comment les défauts se comporteront dans différentes conditions, un peu comme savoir la météo peut t’aider à décider si on doi prendre un parapluie.

#L’importance de la recherche

Étudier les défauts et leur dynamique est crucial pour de nombreux domaines scientifiques, y compris la physique de la matière condensée et la cosmologie. Les insights tirés des études sur les défauts peuvent mener à une meilleure compréhension des matériaux, du transfert d’énergie, et même de l’univers lui-même. En démêlant les mystères des défauts, les scientifiques peuvent améliorer notre compréhension des lois fondamentales qui régissent le cosmos.

#La dynamique des flux RG des défauts

Le terme « flux RG » fait référence à la manière dont un système change en évoluant à différentes échelles d’énergie. Cette évolution peut être comparée à la façon dont une rivière creuse son chemin à travers la terre avec le temps. Explorer les flux RG des défauts nous aide à comprendre comment les défauts se comportent sous différentes conditions, ce qui est essentiel pour prédire leurs impacts à long terme sur les systèmes physiques.

#Le screening et ses effets

Le screening en physique fait référence à un processus qui réduit l’interaction entre les particules. Dans le contexte des défauts, cela signifie que la présence de certains types de défauts peut réduire ou modifier les effets des champs environnants. C’est un peu comme un écran sur une fenêtre qui bloque les insectes indésirables tout en laissant passer un peu d’air frais. Comprendre le screening est vital pour saisir comment les défauts interagiront avec leur environnement.

#Le rôle de la Déformation

La déformation en physique implique de changer la structure ou les propriétés d’un défaut ou d’un système. Tout comme un sculpteur peut façonner de l’argile en différentes formes, les chercheurs peuvent manipuler les défauts pour étudier leurs effets sur un système. Ce processus est crucial pour révéler les complexités de la dynamique des défauts, car il permet aux scientifiques d’expérimenter différentes configurations et d’observer les comportements qui en résultent.

#Techniques de recherche

Pour étudier les défauts et leur dynamique, les physiciens emploient diverses techniques de recherche. Cela peut inclure des expériences en laboratoire, des simulations informatiques et de la modélisation mathématique. Chaque méthode apporte des insights uniques, et en les combinant, les chercheurs peuvent construire une compréhension plus complète des défauts et de leurs effets sur l’environnement qui les entoure.

#Conclusion

L’étude des défauts dans la théorie des champs quantiques est un domaine de recherche fascinant qui a le potentiel de révéler des vérités plus profondes sur l’univers. En examinant comment les défauts se comportent, interagissent et évoluent dans le temps, les scientifiques peuvent obtenir des insights précieux non seulement sur les défauts eux-mêmes, mais aussi sur les propriétés fondamentales de l’univers. À mesure que la recherche dans ce domaine continue de se développer, on pourrait découvrir de nouvelles voies pour comprendre l’intricate toile de forces et de particules qui façonnent notre réalité.

Comprendre les défauts ouvre également la possibilité d’applications pratiques. De l’amélioration des matériaux en ingénierie au développement de nouvelles technologies, les connaissances acquises grâce à l’étude des défauts pourraient mener à des innovations bénéfiques pour la société. Donc, pendant qu’on continue de naviguer dans ce monde complexe de particules, de forces et de champs, gardons un œil sur ces défauts ennuyeux qui pourraient bien cacher les clés de l’univers.