Sara A. Metwalli
1 min readJan 22, 2025

--

Hello,

Thanks for commenting!

Point 3 is not *really* wrong, though you are correct, my example is not within the quantum realm, my intention was to help people visualize superposition so they can have a ground to build on for more complex aspects of superposition, especially when we have more than just two states.

I stand by point 8, you don’t need to be a physicist to get into quantum. All one need to get into this field is being curios and willing to learn.

The field of quantum physics is very well understood and we have all the math to describe it fully and accurately. Us not being able to build fault-tolerant quantum computers (yet) has nothing to do with not understanding how they fundamentally work, rather not being able to decrease the amount of noise these systems are susceptible to. But a lot of work on that is being done and many error correction algorithms help us with that.

No respectable scientist will ever claim that they know all. Any person that makes that claim, defiantly doesn’t know much. We are all still learning and can be wrong. I am always down to talk about science, and never for a second think I know it all.

--

--

Sara A. Metwalli
Sara A. Metwalli

Written by Sara A. Metwalli

Quantum Computing Ph.D. Traveler, writing lover, and science enthusiast.

Responses (1)