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Theoretical physicists like to ask the big questions: How did the Univ — Michael Duff (physicist)

"Theoretical physicists like to ask the big questions: How did the Universe begin? What are its fundamental constituents? What are the laws of nature that govern these constituents? The smallest constituents of matter are, by definition, the s. But what is an elementary particle, exactly? How do we know when we have reached the bottom line? Well, it turns out to be easier to say what an elementary particle is not."
Michael Duff (physicist)
Michael Duff (physicist)
Michael Duff (physicist)
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Michael James Duff FRS, FRSA is a British theoretical physicist and pioneering theorist of supergravity who is the Principal of the Faculty of Physical Sciences and Abdus Salam Chair of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College London.

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"lies at the heart of quantum information theory, with applications to quantum computing, teleportation, cryptography and communication. In the apparently separate world of quantum gravity, the of radiating black holes has also occupied centre stage. Despite their apparent differences, it turns out that there is a correspondence between the two. ... Whenever two very different areas of theoretical physics are found to share the same mathematics, it frequently leads to new insights on both sides. Here we describe how knowledge of string theory and M-theory leads to new discoveries about Quantum Information Theory (QIT) and vice-versa (Duff 2007; Kallosh and Linde 2006; Levay 2006)."
Michael Duff (physicist)Michael Duff (physicist)
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"Superunification underwent a major paradigm shift in 1984 when eleven-dimensional supergravity was knocked off its pedestal by ten-dimensional superstrings. This last year has witnessed a new shift of equal proportions: perturbative ten-dimensional superstrings have in their turn been superseded by a new non-perturbative theory called , which describes supermembranes and superfivebranes, which subsumes all five consistent string theories and whose low energy limit is, ironically, eleven-dimensional supergravity."
Michael Duff (physicist)Michael Duff (physicist)