Chicago hopes to become a world centre for quantum research
But to what end?
To a casual visitor, the basement of the William Eckhardt Research Centre, at the University of Chicago, might appear nothing special. Whereas the upper floors of the building are a postmodern tower of angled glass, underground the walls are bare-white MDF. Yet to David Awschalom, one of America’s leading molecular physicists, and the director of the Chicago Quantum Exchange, it is down here, three storeys below ground, that is the most exciting part of the architecture. The parts upstairs “were made to be beautiful”, he says. “This was made to be functional.” There is almost perfect silence, except for the quiet hum of the air-conditioning. Three feet of concrete absorb even the tiniest of vibrations caused by, say, a truck passing nearby, without affecting the instruments.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Quant, um?”
United States July 8th 2023
- What to make of the Supreme Court’s tumultuous term
- Can baseball fans be won over by the world’s second-biggest sport?
- Chicago hopes to become a world centre for quantum research
- Republican presidential candidates canoodle with Moms for Liberty
- Dick Ravitch, New York’s fiscal superman
- How American universities will react as race-based admissions end
- America has a shortage of lab monkeys
More from United States
An alternative theory to explain America’s murder spike in 2020
What if it wasn’t about policing?
Donald Trump’s Defining Decade
Will America’s president overcome the 1970s, or just refight its battles?
Donald Trump revives ideas of a Star Wars-like missile shield
He wants a swarm of missile-toting satellites to take out incoming threats
America’s foreign aid pause puts lives at risk
Donald Trump sought disruption. He hurt America first.
Donald Trump goes to war with his employees
The president wants to shrink and remake the civil service
Kash Patel is a crackpot
Is he also a menace?