Get the latest tech news

'Next-Level' Chaos Traces the True Limit of Predictability


In math and computer science, researchers have long understood that some questions are fundamentally unanswerable. Now physicists are exploring how even ordinary physical systems put hard limits on what we can predict, even in principle.

The French scholar Pierre-Simon Laplace crisply articulated his expectation that the universe was fully knowable in 1814, asserting that a sufficiently clever “demon” could predict the entire future given a complete knowledge of the present. “I give you God’s view,” said Toby Cubitt, a physicist turned computer scientist at University College London and part of the vanguard of the current charge into the unknowable, and “you still can’t predict what it’s going to do.” If it takes some oomph to do this, a system is “gapped.” If it can become excited at any moment, without any infusion of energy, it is “gapless.” The spectral gap determines the color that shines from a neon sign, what a material will do when you remove all heat from it, and — in a different context — what the mass of the proton should be.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Hacker News

Read more on:

Photo of Level

Level

Photo of chaos

chaos

Photo of predictability

predictability

Related news:

News photo

'Honestly terrifying': Yosemite National Park is in chaos

News photo

Trump has thrown a wrench into a national EV charging program | Electric charging projects have been thrown into chaos by the administration's directive.

News photo

Level 5's Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time coming to PlayStation and Xbox, as well as Switch and PC