
Living in a Quantum World
Quantum mechanics is not just about teeny particles. It applies to things of all sizes: birds, plants, maybe even people
Vlatko Vedral is in an entangled state of professor at the University of Oxford and at the National University of Singapore. His main contribution to quantum physics has been a novel way of quantifying entanglement and applying it to macroscopic physical systems. Besides physics, his favorite activity is spending time with his three children, playing his Yamaha electric guitar with the Marshall amp turned up to 11, and riding jet skis in Southeast Asia.

Living in a Quantum World
Quantum mechanics is not just about teeny particles. It applies to things of all sizes: birds, plants, maybe even people

The Joys of Quantum Entanglement

Does Quantum Mechanics Flout the Laws of Thermodynamics?

Living in a Quantum World
Quantum mechanics is not just about teeny particles. It applies to things of all sizes: birds, plants, maybe even people