Category Archives: Quantum art

Science Rhymes

Our blog Quanta Rei has been online for three and a half years. We’ve been exploring a variety of ways to convey our passion for science. Some of our posts have been rather technical, some more philosophical, some quite artistic. … Continue reading

Posted in Miscellanea, Quantum art, Quantum fiction, Science & Society | Leave a comment

Our Quantum Reality: A Physics-Art Project

Cross posted from FQXi’s blog: https://fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/3253 I recently completed a collaborative art-physics project, with award-winning artist Joseph Namara Hollis, to produce a short, illustrated book about the quantum mechanical reality in which we live. From the start, this was an ambitious … Continue reading

Posted in Philosophy, Quantum art, Quantum foundations, Science & Society, Superposition | 6 Comments

In pursuit of the deepest link

There is not a deep divide between science and arts. Rather the opposite! I have long been interested in unveiling links between these two seemingly distinct spheres of knowledge. Scientists are typically seen as rational beings who pursue the truth … Continue reading

Posted in Dancing quanta, Entanglement, Quantum art, Science & Society | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Entanglement picture

I first came across the Entanglement picture about 11 years ago. Nearing the end of my year-long visit to the Centre for Quantum Computation in Cambridge (UK), I was returning to Salerno (Italy) to start working on my PhD thesis. As … Continue reading

Posted in Conferences, Entanglement, Quantum art, Science & Society | 1 Comment

Computers designing quantum optics experiments

Quantum states can exhibit bizarre but powerful properties, such as being in a superposition or containing correlations not possible in classical physics. If these properties can be controlled, then they can be exploited in quantum technologies to dramatically transform computing, enable … Continue reading

Posted in Interference, Quantum art, Quantum research, Quantum software, Superposition | 4 Comments