Scientists have reversed the
direction of time with a quantum computer.
The breakthrough study seems to contradict basic laws of physics and
could alter our understanding of the processes governing the universe. In a
development that also represents a major advance in our understanding of
quantum computers, by using electrons and the strange world of quantum mechanics,
researchers were able to turn back time in an experiment that is the
equivalent of causing a broken rack of pool balls to go back into place.

Anyone watching the computer
would see the event as if time had turned backwards. The researchers –
from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and helped by
colleagues in Switzerland and the US – expect the technique to improve in time,
becoming more reliable and precise with time. Lead
researcher Dr Gordey Lesovik, who heads the Laboratory of the Physics of
Quantum Information at the Moscow Institute of Physics & Technology (MIPT),
said:
“We have artificially created a state that evolves in a direction opposite to that of the thermodynamic arrow of time.”

The "time machine"
described in the journal Scientific Reports consists of a rudimentary quantum
computer made up of electron "qubits". A qubit is
a unit of information described by a "one", a "zero", or a
mixed "superposition" of both states.
In the experiment, an
"evolution program" was launched which caused the qubits to become an
increasingly complex changing pattern of zeros and ones. During this process,
order was lost – just as it is when the pool balls are struck and
scattered with a cue. But then another program modified the state of the
quantum computer in such a way that it evolved "backwards", from
chaos to order.

It meant the state of the
qubits was rewound back to its original starting point. Most laws of physics
work both ways, in the future and the past. If you see a video of a pool ball
knocking into another one, for instance, and then reverse that same video, the
physical processes would both make sense and it would be impossible at the
level of physics to know which way around would be correct.
But the universe does have
one rule that goes only in one way: the second law of thermodynamics, which
describes the progression from order to disorder.
If you saw a video of
someone breaking a perfectly arranged triangle of pool balls into a mess, for
instance, then watching that backwards would obviously look nonsensical.

The new experiment is like
giving the pool table such a perfectly calculated kick that the balls rolled
back into an orderly pyramid. The scientists found that, working with just two
qubits, "time reversal" was achieved with a success rate of 85 per
cent. When three qubits were involved more errors occurred, resulting in a 50
per cent success rate. The error rate is expected to drop as scientists improve
the devices used to be more sophisticated, the researchers behind the discovery
said.
The experiment could have a
practical application in the development of quantum computers, the scientists
said.
"Our algorithm could be updated and used to test programmes written for quantum computers and eliminate noise and errors," said Dr Lesovik.
This article was originally published on the Independent.
Reversing entropy is not by far the same thing as reversing time, what's wrong with you? What amount of energy did they put in the system to get it back to an ordered state? Oh, if you said that after powering down the computer, it actually ran backwards (as if it were still powered), rearranged itself in its initial state (without another program running, just the initial one in reverse) then powered down as it were before it was first powered on - now that would've been time reversal. Oh, but that can't quite happen, can it? Major click-bait.
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