
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2022, the Nobel prize for physics was awarded to a trio of scientists for their work on the fundamentals of quantum mechanics. This week, host Alok Jha asks one of the laureates, Anton Zeilinger, how he proved Einstein wrong and how his research into a phenomenon called quantum entanglement can help make sense of the universe. Plus, can “quantum teleportation” usher in a new era of technology?
Anton Zeilinger is a physicist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and professor emeritus at the University of Vienna.
For full access to The Economist’s print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.8
570570 ratings
In 2022, the Nobel prize for physics was awarded to a trio of scientists for their work on the fundamentals of quantum mechanics. This week, host Alok Jha asks one of the laureates, Anton Zeilinger, how he proved Einstein wrong and how his research into a phenomenon called quantum entanglement can help make sense of the universe. Plus, can “quantum teleportation” usher in a new era of technology?
Anton Zeilinger is a physicist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and professor emeritus at the University of Vienna.
For full access to The Economist’s print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4,208 Listeners
527 Listeners
917 Listeners
363 Listeners
96 Listeners
224 Listeners
108 Listeners
2,530 Listeners
45 Listeners
1,069 Listeners
1,415 Listeners
138 Listeners
116 Listeners
101 Listeners
36 Listeners
890 Listeners
344 Listeners
496 Listeners
78 Listeners
68 Listeners
123 Listeners
100 Listeners
252 Listeners