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Showing episodes and shows of
Michel Devoret
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La Science, CQFD
Michel Devoret, prix Nobel 2025 : le quantique change d'échelle
durée : 01:00:18 - La Science, CQFD - par : Natacha Triou, Antoine Beauchamp - Durant sa carrière, Michel Devoret a combiné l’électronique et la mécanique quantique. Comment observe-t-on un phénomène quantique macroscopique ? Qu’est-ce qu’un atome artificiel ? Quel intérêt pour l’ordinateur quantique ? Retour avec le prix Nobel de physique 2025 sur son parcours et ses travaux. - réalisation : Olivier Bétard - invités : Michel Devoret Prix Nobel de physique 2025, professeur de physique appliquée à l'université Yale
2026-01-29
1h 00
La Science, CQFD
Michel Devoret, prix Nobel 2025 : le quantique change d'échelle
durée : 01:00:18 - La Science, CQFD - par : Natacha Triou, Antoine Beauchamp - Durant sa carrière, Michel Devoret a combiné l’électronique et la mécanique quantique. Comment observe-t-on un phénomène quantique macroscopique ? Qu’est-ce qu’un atome artificiel ? Quel intérêt pour l’ordinateur quantique ? Retour avec le prix Nobel de physique 2025 sur son parcours et ses travaux. - réalisation : Olivier Bétard - invités : Michel Devoret Prix Nobel de physique 2025, professeur de physique appliquée à l'université Yale
2026-01-29
1h 00
Les émissions de savoir de France Culture
Michel Devoret, prix Nobel 2025 : le quantique change d'échelle
durée : 01:00:18 - La Science, CQFD - par : Natacha Triou, Antoine Beauchamp - Durant sa carrière, Michel Devoret a combiné l’électronique et la mécanique quantique. Comment observe-t-on un phénomène quantique macroscopique ? Qu’est-ce qu’un atome artificiel ? Quel intérêt pour l’ordinateur quantique ? Retour avec le prix Nobel de physique 2025 sur son parcours et ses travaux. - réalisation : Olivier Bétard - invités : Michel Devoret Prix Nobel de physique 2025, professeur de physique appliquée à l'université Yale
2026-01-29
1h 00
Quantum
Quantum 76 - Actualités de décembre 2025
Evénements QUEST-IS chez EDF La conférence dédiée à l’ingénierie quantique organisée par la SEE avec le soutien du SGPI et de l’AID durait trois jours pendant la première semaine de décembre, chez EDF à Palaiseau.https://www.oezratty.net/Files/Conferences/Olivier%20Ezratty%20QUEST-IS%20Quantum%20Engineering%20Dec2025.pdfhttps://conference-questis.org/quest-is-2025/program/proceddings/Conférence organisée par le Fermilab faisait aussi le point sur le lien entre calcul quantique et HPC, notamment dans le cadre de simula...
2026-01-04
1h 19
La Fábrica de la Ciencia (LFDLC)
Premio Nobel de Física 2025 al efecto túnel cuántico macroscópico. Francis Villatoro. 662
Hoy nos visita nuestro amigo y colaborador Francis Villatoro para hablarnos del Nobel de Física 2025. John Clarke (83 años), de la Universidad de California en Berkeley, California, EEUU, Michel H. Devoret (72 años), de la Universidad de Yale, New Haven, Connecticut, EEUU y de la Universidad de California en Santa Barbara, California, EEUU, y John M. Martinis (67 años), de la Universidad de California en Santa Bárbara, California, EEUU, logran el ansiado galardón por descubrir el efecto túnel cuántico macroscópico y la cuantización de la energía en un circuito eléctrico. Realizaron experimentos...
2025-12-26
31 min
La Conversation scientifique
Michel Devoret, prix Nobel de physique 2025
durée : 00:59:02 - La Conversation scientifique - par : Etienne Klein - En compagnie de John Clarke et John M. Martinis, Michel Devoret vient de recevoir le Prix Nobel de physique pour ses travaux en mécanique quantique macroscopique. En quoi consiste l'effet tunnel quantique macroscopique et quelle est son importance dans l’essor de l’informatique quantique ? - invités : Michel Devoret Prix Nobel de physique 2025, professeur de physique appliquée à l'université Yale
2025-12-20
59 min
Les émissions de savoir de France Culture
Michel Devoret, prix Nobel de physique 2025
durée : 00:59:02 - La Conversation scientifique - par : Etienne Klein - En compagnie de John Clarke et John M. Martinis, Michel Devoret vient de recevoir le Prix Nobel de physique pour ses travaux en mécanique quantique macroscopique. En quoi consiste l'effet tunnel quantique macroscopique et quelle est son importance dans l’essor de l’informatique quantique ? - invités : Michel Devoret Prix Nobel de physique 2025, professeur de physique appliquée à l'université Yale
2025-12-20
59 min
Ai Confini Della Scienza
Premio Nobel per la Fisica 2025: Una Scoperta Che Riscrive Le Regole Della Realtà
Il Premio Nobel 2025 a Clarke, Devoret e Martinis celebra la dimostrazione dell'Effetto Tunnel Quantistico in sistemi macroscopici. Questa scoperta ci costringe a ripensare il confine tra i mondi microscopico e quotidiano. Esploriamo il lavoro pionieristico sui circuiti superconduttori che ha portato alla nascita dei qubit (unità fondamentali dei computer quantistici), aprendo la strada alla Supremazia Quantistica e a una nuova era di rivoluzione tecnologica🎧 Segui il podcast per esplorare i confini della scienza, con 3 episodi ogni settimana!Vuoi vedere le animazioni di questo podcast? Questo audio è tratto da un video originale sul nostro canale YouTube. La pa...
2025-12-08
29 min
IQ - Wissenschaft und Forschung
Wegbereiter eines Quantencomputers - Das steckt hinter dem Nobelpreis für Physik
Am 10. Dezember 2025 werden die Nobelpreise verliehen. Nobelpreis für Physik: Die Quantenwelt ist die Welt der kleinsten Teilchen. Merkwürdige Dinge passieren dort, zum Beispiel können einzelne Teilchen durch ein Hindernis hindurch tunneln anstatt an ihm abzuprallen. Das ist der sogenannte Tunneleffekt. Als drei Physiker in den 80er Jahren in ihrem Labor gezeigt haben, dass auch mehrere Teilchen zusammen sich so verhalten können, wussten sie nicht, wie bahnbrechend diese Entdeckung ist.John Clarke, Michel Devoret und John Martinis heißen sie und haben damals zusammen in Berkeley gearbeitet. In dieser Podcast Folge klären wir, wa...
2025-12-08
12 min
The New Quantum Era - innovation in quantum computing, science and technology
Macroscopic Quantum Tunneling with Nobel Laureate John Martinis
Episode overviewJohn Martinis, Nobel laureate and former head of Google’s quantum hardware effort, joins Sebastian Hassinger on The New Quantum Era to trace the arc of superconducting quantum circuits—from the first demonstrations of macroscopic quantum tunneling in the 1980s to today’s push for wafer-scale, manufacturable qubit processors. The episode weaves together the physics of “synthetic atoms” built from Josephson junctions, the engineering mindset needed to turn them into reliable computers, and what it will take for fabrication to unlock true large-scale quantum systems.Guest bioJohn M. Martinis is a physicist whose expe...
2025-11-26
49 min
Advanced Quantum Deep Dives
Quantum Leaps: C2QA's $125M Tantalum Qubit Quest for Coherence, Correction, and Modular Mastery
This is your Advanced Quantum Deep Dives podcast.Electric hums, a faintly chilled breeze from the dilution fridge, and the faintest shimmer of blue light on superconducting circuitry—this is where I live most days. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and you’re tuned in to Advanced Quantum Deep Dives. No meandering intro today; the quantum world is moving fast, so let’s jump right in.Just yesterday, Brookhaven National Laboratory and the Department of Energy dropped news that pumps real adrenaline into the quantum veins: the Co-design Center for Quantum Advantage, or C2QA, has...
2025-11-05
04 min
Quantum Computing 101
Quantum Leaps: Hybrid Systems Spark a Computing Revolution
This is your Quantum Computing 101 podcast.Imagine, just this week, Google’s Quantum Echoes algorithm not only solved problems 13,000 times faster than the world’s fastest supercomputers—but, for the first time, did so in a way that can be independently verified on another quantum computer. That is, until now, a true quantum advantage—where the quantum system does something impossibly fast for even the largest classical supercomputer—was always a bit of a “black box.” But in an experiment published in Nature, Google’s team, led by Xiao Mi and Michel Devoret, winner of this year’s Nobel Prize in Phy...
2025-10-26
05 min
Quantum Computing 101
Quantum-Classical Fusion: Hybrid Architectures Accelerate Breakthroughs | Quantum Computing 101
This is your Quantum Computing 101 podcast.The news electrified my office this morning—the hum of quantum processors was practically drowned out by headlines of the latest hybrid solution poised to bridge quantum and classical computing once more. I’m Leo, Learning Enhanced Operator, and you’re listening to Quantum Computing 101.Let’s cut right into what’s making my qubits tingle with excitement: the new hybrid architectures that go beyond theoretical promise, shaping real technological inflection points. This week, Diraq and Quantum Machines pulled off what many called impossible just months ago: a genuinely integrated quantum-cl...
2025-10-13
03 min
Quantum Dev Digest
Quantum Leap: Nobel Laureates Unveil the Macroscopic Dance of Electrons
This is your Quantum Dev Digest podcast.Unbelievable. Here we are, October 13, 2025, and the world has just watched quantum physics stride from the shadows of theory into the bright glare of mainstream recognition. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and today on Quantum Dev Digest, I am awestruck—because the Nobel Prize in Physics has just been awarded to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for a discovery that, in a sense, lets us all peek behind the curtain of reality itself.Let’s cut to it. Picture an electric circuit, something you could cradle...
2025-10-13
03 min
Quantum Tech Updates
Nobel Quantum Hardware Pioneers Unleash Computational Revolution
This is your Quantum Tech Updates podcast.I’m Leo, your resident quantum computing specialist, and today I can barely contain my excitement. In the last few days, the quantum field has witnessed a seismic event—the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics has gone to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for bringing quantum effects out of the microscopic shadows and into the palm of your hand. This breakthrough—the demonstration of quantum tunneling and energy quantization in circuits big enough to handle—didn’t just shake up theory; it launched the hardware revolution at the core of every adva...
2025-10-13
03 min
The Quantum Stack Weekly
Quantum Simulation Unleashed: Trillion-State Problems on Your Laptop
This is your The Quantum Stack Weekly podcast.Picture this: midnight in a university lab, the cold blue glow of a dilution refrigerator humming against the silence, superconducting circuits glinting like alien jewelry under fiber optics. That’s where quantum computing feels most alive—a surreal overlap of the physical and the impossible. I’m Leo, your quantum companion here at The Quantum Stack Weekly, and today I can barely contain my excitement. Because, as of yesterday, something quietly earth-shattering has happened. Not in a deep lab—on an ordinary laptop.Researchers at the University at Buffalo...
2025-10-13
03 min
Quantum Research Now
Quantum Ballet: IonQ's Leap in Atomic Simulations Accelerates Solutions
This is your Quantum Research Now podcast.The quantum world rarely pauses, and neither shall I. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and today, IonQ has electrified the field with an announcement that feels like the crackle of a Josephson junction at critical bias. Earlier today, IonQ revealed a breakthrough in quantum chemistry simulations—using their quantum-classical auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo algorithm to accurately compute atomic-level forces. But what does that mean for you? Let’s spin this into everyday parlance.Imagine the molecular world as a grand ballet, each atom tiptoeing in a duet of att...
2025-10-13
03 min
Get Current - Navigate the latest in AI—An original Coastal Intelligence podcast
When Santa Barbara Shows the World How It's Done
Episode Title: "When Santa Barbara Shows the World How It's Done" Air Date: Monday, October 13, 2025 Episode Length: ~5 minutes Main Headlines: UCSB physicists John Martinis and Michel Devoret win Nobel Prize in Physics for quantum tunneling research that enables modern AI Three sold-out Coastal Intelligence events demonstrated Santa Barbara's unique integration of art, technology, and community dialogue State of AI Report 2025: 95% of professionals now use AI at work or home, with 76% paying out of pocket Google's Gemini became the first AI to win gold medal in international programming competition Enterprise adoption gap: While usage surges...
2025-10-13
14 min
Actualités et infos de Rodez et sa région - À la une
Prix Nobel d’économie 2025 : le Français Philippe Aghion récompensé ce lundi, six jours après Michel Devoret
Après Michel Devoret côté physique, la France a un autre lauréat dans les prix Nobel : Philippe Aghion a été récompensé au rayon économie, ce lundi 13 octobre 2025.
2025-10-13
00 min
Advanced Quantum Deep Dives
Quantum Leaps: Nobel Prizes, Laptop Breakthroughs, and the Eerie Silence of Qubits
This is your Advanced Quantum Deep Dives podcast.Outside my window, the hum of classical computers pulses along, oblivious. But today’s quantum world has cracked open a new dimension—one I’ve spent years plumbing, yet it always manages to surprise me. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and welcome back to Advanced Quantum Deep Dives.Let’s dive into the quantum riptide unleashed just this week. On October 12th, physicists from the University at Buffalo upgraded a pivotal shortcut in quantum simulations—the truncated Wigner approximation. Picture the billions of entangled atomic possibilities inside a sin...
2025-10-12
03 min
Quantum Dev Digest
Quantum Nobel: Circuits, Qudits, and Error Correction Breakthroughs
This is your Quantum Dev Digest podcast.Today, a cold October day in 2025, feels electrified. Imagine me—Leo, Learning Enhanced Operator—standing at the crossroads of quantum revolution. My inbox filled overnight with messages about the Nobel Physics Prize, awarded just days ago to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis. Their names buzz through every quantum lab, their breakthrough now officially recognized: making quantum effects visible in electric circuits you can hold in your palm. Picture billions of electrons acting in concert, tunneling through barriers like marbles magically rolling through a wall of glass, a phenomenon once thou...
2025-10-12
04 min
Quantum Tech Updates
Nobel Trio Sparks Quantum Revolution: Superconducting Qubits to Error-Corrected Circuits
This is your Quantum Tech Updates podcast.Here’s Leo, your quantum computing specialist, bringing you this week’s Quantum Tech Updates.Let me tell you, the world of quantum just shook—literally. Three days ago, John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis, whose work I’ve admired for decades, were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for demonstrating macroscopic quantum effects in electrical circuits. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences put it perfectly: they proved that groups of electrons, acting as a single quantum entity, can tunnel across barriers and absorb or emit energy in discrete...
2025-10-12
04 min
The Quantum Stack Weekly
Quantum Pioneers: Bridging the Micro and Macro Worlds
This is your The Quantum Stack Weekly podcast.Imagine a world where the rules of classical physics no longer apply, a realm where the strange and mystical dance of quantum mechanics reigns supreme. This week, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for their groundbreaking work on macroscopic quantum mechanical tunneling and energy quantization in electric circuits. Their discovery in the 1980s laid the groundwork for much of today's quantum computing research.Just as these pioneers bridged the gap between the microscopic and macroscopic worlds, quantum computing is...
2025-10-12
02 min
Quantum Research Now
Quantum Leaps: Laptops Tackle Complex Problems, IonQ's $2B Boost, and Nobel Breakthroughs
This is your Quantum Research Now podcast.Hello, I'm Leo, your guide through the world of quantum computing on Quantum Research Now. Today, let's dive into some exciting developments that are shaping the future of computing.Just recently, scientists at the University of Buffalo made a breakthrough by adapting the truncated Wigner approximation to solve complex quantum problems on ordinary laptops. This innovation means researchers can now tackle systems that once required supercomputers, making quantum dynamics more accessible and efficient. Imagine being able to decode the intricate ballet of quantum particles on a device you can...
2025-10-12
02 min
Les interviews d'Inter
"Après Sébastien Lecornu, Sébastien Lecornu", et après ?
durée : 00:19:38 - L'invité de 8h20 - par : Ali Baddou, Marion L'hour - Astrid de Villaines, journaliste et productrice de "L'Esprit public" sur France Culture, son livre "Décrypter les institutions politiques" (Larousse), Eric Fottorino,écrivain et fondateur du "1hebdo" et de "Légende", Bruno Jeudy, directeur délégué de La Tribune Dimanche sont les invités de 8h20. - invités : Alain ASPECT, Michel Devoret - Alain Aspect : Professeur à l’Institut d’optique et à l’école Polytechnique, directeur de recherche émérite du CNRS, membre de l’Académie des sciences et Prix Nobel de physique 2022, Michel Devoret : Prix Nobel de physique 2...
2025-10-11
19 min
L'invité de 8h20
"Après Sébastien Lecornu, Sébastien Lecornu", et après ?
durée : 00:19:38 - L'invité de 8h20 - par : Ali Baddou, Marion L'hour - Astrid de Villaines, journaliste et productrice de "L'Esprit public" sur France Culture, son livre "Décrypter les institutions politiques" (Larousse), Eric Fottorino,écrivain et fondateur du "1hebdo" et de "Légende", Bruno Jeudy, directeur délégué de La Tribune Dimanche sont les invités de 8h20. - invités : Alain ASPECT, Michel Devoret - Alain Aspect : Professeur à l’Institut d’optique et à l’école Polytechnique, directeur de recherche émérite du CNRS, membre de l’Académie des sciences et Prix Nobel de physique 2022, Michel Devoret : Prix Nobel de physique 2...
2025-10-11
19 min
S'informer avec Inter
"Après Sébastien Lecornu, Sébastien Lecornu", et après ?
durée : 00:19:38 - L'invité de 8h20 - par : Ali Baddou, Marion L'hour - Astrid de Villaines, journaliste et productrice de "L'Esprit public" sur France Culture, son livre "Décrypter les institutions politiques" (Larousse), Eric Fottorino,écrivain et fondateur du "1hebdo" et de "Légende", Bruno Jeudy, directeur délégué de La Tribune Dimanche sont les invités de 8h20. - invités : Alain ASPECT, Michel Devoret - Alain Aspect : Professeur à l’Institut d’optique et à l’école Polytechnique, directeur de recherche émérite du CNRS, membre de l’Académie des sciences et Prix Nobel de physique 2022, Michel Devoret : Prix Nobel de physique 2...
2025-10-11
19 min
Monde Numérique (Actu Tech)
📆 L'HEBDO 11/10 - Les robots arrivent (et ils font la vaisselle)
Cette semaine : les humanoïdes domestiques frappent à la porte avec le robot Figure 03, OpenAI veut transformer ChatGPT en interface du futur, la France toujours privée d'innovations Google, et une carte à puce post-quantique. Sans oublier l’IA qui nous rend paresseux selon Marion Carré, et un gadget totalement inutile donc indispensable signé Olivier Mével.💡 Découvrez Frogans, l’innovation française qui réinvente le Web L'actu🤖 Figure 03 : le robot qui débarrasse la tableUn humanoïde qui range les chaussettes, s’occupe du chien et plie le linge ? C’est ce que promet la s...
2025-10-11
53 min
Advanced Quantum Deep Dives
Quantum Lie Detector: Proving Quantum Behavior at Scale | Quiet Please Podcast
This is your Advanced Quantum Deep Dives podcast.The air in the quantum lab this week seemed to crackle with anticipation, as the global physics community turned its attention to a landmark breakthrough just published on October 7th by an international team led from the University of Leiden. They unveiled what I’d call, with no exaggeration, the world’s first “quantum lie detector”—an audacious experiment designed to prove, at scale, whether large quantum systems behave in genuinely quantum ways. Imagine stepping into a room full of overlapping conversations, some honest, some half-truths, and some deeply entangled. The challe...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Dev Digest
Quantum Leaps: Nobel Prize, Qudits, and the Dawn of a New Computing Era
This is your Quantum Dev Digest podcast.A voltage flickers where logic says there should be none—the universe breaking its own rules, at least as we know them. Welcome to Quantum Dev Digest. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and if you’ve been following this week’s scientific buzz, then you know exactly why my lab’s been humming with excitement.On Tuesday, the Nobel Prize in Physics spotlighted the kind of discovery that snaps the invisible tendrils of quantum physics into the hands of engineers worldwide. Michel Devoret, John Martinis, and John Clarke ear...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Tech Updates
Quantum Nobel: Josephson Junctions Spark Qubit Revolution
This is your Quantum Tech Updates podcast.Did you feel the tremor in the tech world this week? It wasn’t a run-of-the-mill software update or a viral meme; this one was seismic—a shift that rewires how we think about reality at its most fundamental. Just two days ago, the Nobel Prize for Physics was awarded to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for their work that dragged the famously weird world of quantum mechanics out of the subatomic shadows and onto the workbench, in the form of a superconducting Josephson junction device—the beating heart of tod...
2025-10-10
03 min
The Quantum Stack Weekly
Quantum Leaps: SIESTA-QCOMP Unveils Hybrid Framework, Untangling Molecular Knots
This is your The Quantum Stack Weekly podcast.I’m Leo—Learning Enhanced Operator—and I’m speaking to you from a lab where the air hums with the soft throb of helium compressors, qubits pulsing at millikelvin temperatures under superconducting shields. Today, I’m barely pausing for small talk, because something seismic rippled through quantum scientific corridors in the last 24 hours: the SIESTA-QCOMP hybrid quantum-classical framework was unveiled at the Royal Society’s landmark meeting on quantum computing in materials and molecular sciences.Picture this: the classic Density Functional Theory, a workhorse of computational chemistry, hitting a wa...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Research Now
Pasqal's Quantum Leap: Chicago's New Powerhouse for Neutral Atom Computing
This is your Quantum Research Now podcast.Today, the quantum world feels electric—quite literally—because Pasqal, the French-born quantum computing powerhouse, just announced it will establish its U.S. headquarters in Illinois, right at the heart of Chicago’s evolving Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park. It’s more than a ribbon-cutting; it’s the next move in a global chess match for quantum supremacy. The Pasqal team, co-founded by Nobel laureate Alain Aspect, is bringing its neutral-atom quantum processors to U.S. soil—something that has researchers and tech CEOs equally abuzz.I’m Leo, your Learning...
2025-10-10
03 min
Advanced Quantum Deep Dives
Quantum Lie Detector: Proving Quantum Supremacy with Bell's Test
This is your Advanced Quantum Deep Dives podcast.The world of quantum science never sits still. This week, a seismic shift—both in recognition and in technical achievement—has rippled across our field. Hello, I’m Leo, quantum specialist and your guide for today’s Advanced Quantum Deep Dives.Just three days ago, the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for their work demonstrating *quantum tunneling* and *energy quantization* in electrical circuits that, remarkably, you can actually hold in your hand. These pioneers proved that quantum weirdness wasn’t confined...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Basics Weekly
Quantum Leap: Unveiling the Colorful World of Qubits for Kids and Beginners
This is your Quantum Basics Weekly podcast.Tuesday morning. My coffee’s steaming beside a stack of recent quantum journals, when suddenly a message flashes onto my screen: Qolour, the creative quantum learning hub, has just launched their new digital quantum board-book for kids—yes, today! It’s not just a delightfully colorful read for young minds, but it’s also the first major attempt to demystify quantum superposition and entanglement before grade school even begins.I’m Leo, Learning Enhanced Operator, and this week’s Quantum Basics Weekly is all about making quantum ideas truly accessible...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Computing 101
Quantum Leaps: HSQC Marries Classical & Quantum for Unrivaled Optimization
This is your Quantum Computing 101 podcast.Today the quantum world feels closer than ever, especially with yesterday’s headlines. The Nobel Prize in Physics just honored Michel Devoret, John Clarke, and John Martinis—the architects who proved quantum tunneling works not only in theoretical sandboxes, but on real chips, with groups of electrons punching through barriers almost magically, giving rise to the superconducting qubits on which much of our field relies. That’s not ancient history; it set the stage for everything happening now, from mobile phones to quantum computers humming in national labs.I’m Leo, you...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Dev Digest
Nobel Breakthrough: Scaling Quantum Weirdness for Real-World Tech
This is your Quantum Dev Digest podcast.The announcement came this Tuesday, and honestly, I'm still processing what it means for everything we're building here in the quantum labs. Three scientists—John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis—just won the Nobel Prize in Physics for work they did back in the 1980s, demonstrating something that seemed impossible: quantum tunneling and energy quantization at a scale you could hold in your hand.Let me paint you a picture of what they achieved. Imagine you're standing in front of a solid brick wall. Classically, if you throw a ma...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Tech Updates
Scaling Quantum Weirdness: Nobel Prize Spotlights Pioneering Circuits
This is your Quantum Tech Updates podcast.This week, the world of quantum technology was jolted with the same kind of electrifying excitement I felt the first time I watched entangled photons leap into superposition. The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics has just been awarded to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret, and John Martinis for their pioneering work demonstrating quantum mechanics on a scale you can actually hold in your hand. I’m Leo, your Learning Enhanced Operator, and on Quantum Tech Updates today, I’m going to unpack why their breakthrough is reshaping not just quantum computing, but how...
2025-10-10
03 min
The Quantum Stack Weekly
Quantum Computing Breakthroughs: From Nobel Prize to Real-World Applications
This is your The Quantum Stack Weekly podcast.The quantum world just had its moment in the spotlight, and I'm not talking about theoretical papers or distant promises. This week, three American scientists, John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis, received the Nobel Prize in Physics for their groundbreaking work on macroscopic quantum mechanical tunneling in superconducting circuits. Their experiments from the 1980s proved that large objects could exhibit quantum behavior, laying the foundation for every quantum computer being built today.But here's what really caught my attention: while the Nobel committee was announcing this historic...
2025-10-10
03 min
Quantum Research Now
Pasqal's $65M Quantum Leap: Neutral Atoms, Nobel Ties, and Illinois' New Tech Nexus
This is your Quantum Research Now podcast.Hello, I'm Leo, and welcome to Quantum Research Now. Just yesterday, on October 9th, 2025, something extraordinary happened in the quantum world that I need to tell you about.The French quantum computing pioneer Pasqal announced they're establishing their United States headquarters right here in Illinois, at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park on Chicago's South Side. This isn't just another tech company setting up shop. This is a sixty-five million dollar investment that signals we're entering a new phase of the quantum revolution.Let me tell you...
2025-10-10
03 min
Nobel Prize Conversations
First reactions | Michel Devoret, Nobel Prize in Physics 2025 | Telephone interview
“I would say a fundamental discovery really becomes true when you can apply it to something concrete.” In this conversation, recorded after two hectic days following the prize announcement, new physics laureate Michel Devoret reflects on the excitement of seeing the fruits of research. He also talks about his co-laureate John Clarke, one of his role models, together with Lord Kelvin. Devoret describes how he woke on announcement day to find that the world already knew the news: “I had completely forgotten that October was the Nobel Prize month!” © Nobel Prize Outreach. First reactions terms of use: h...
2025-10-10
09 min
Aparici en Órbita
Aparici en Órbita s08e06: Los premios Nobel de ciencias del año 2025
En el programa de hoy hacemos un repaso a los tres premios Nobel de ciencias, que se han fallado esta misma semana. El de Medicina ha sido para Mary Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell y Shimon Sakaguchi, por sus descubrimientos sobre cómo el sistema inmunitario "controla" a los glóbulos blancos que podrían atacar a nuestro propio cuerpo. El de Física ha sido para John Clarke, Michel Devoret y John Martinis, por demostrar que las propiedades cuánticas se pueden observar en objetos macroscópicos (en concreto ellos trabajaron con corrientes eléctricas de un centímetro). Y el de Quími...
2025-10-10
12 min
Physics World Weekly Podcast
From quantum curiosity to quantum computers: the 2025 Nobel Prize for Physics
This year’s Nobel Prize for Physics went to John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis “for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantization in an electric circuit”. That circuit was a superconducting device called a Josephson junction and their work in the 1980s led to the development of some of today’s most promising technologies for quantum computers. To chat about this year’s laureates, and the wide-reaching scientific and technological consequences of their work I am joined by Ilana Wisby – who is a quantum physicist, deep tech entrepreneur and former CEO of UK-ba...
2025-10-09
33 min
Cumhuriyet gazetesi
Nobel Ödülleri: Bilim gelişmenin ve yeni ufukların anahtarıdır - Orhan Bursalı
Aziz Sancar, en üst düzey ve özgürce araştırmaların yapıldığı ülkelerden birinde, ABD’de, günde 16-18 saat çalışarak ve merakının peşinde koşarak, odaklandığı konuyu çözmek için yöntemler geliştirerek DNA’nın, ikili zincirdeki bozulmaları nasıl onardığını gösterdi. Çok emek, çok alın teri, Nobel Kimya Ödülü ile taçlandı (Aslında tıp ödülü de olabilirdi). Böylece canlı varlığın çok önemli bir savunma/onarma mekanizması çözülmüştü.Bilim üç ana alandaki buluşlarıyla uygarlığı ilerletiyor ve insanlığın önünde durmadan yeni ufuklar açıyor: Tıp, fizik, kimya... Şü...
2025-10-09
06 min
24H Pujadas - Les partis pris
Les Partis Pris : "Le prix Nobel français... américain", "LR : entre deux feux" et "La Chine veut interdire le pessimisme"
Bonne nouvelle, il y a un prix Nobel français. Il s'appelle Michel Devoret, un spécialiste de la physique quantique. Il est prix Nobel de physique, il a 72 ans. Mais il enseigne à Yale et travaille chez Google. Pascal Perri regrette que les Nobel français partent tous à l'étranger. On ne sait plus ce qui se passe dans le parti Les Républicains. Pour Ruth Elkrief, c'est un groupe qui ne fera pas d'alliance officielle avec le Rassemblement national. Par ailleurs, s'il sort du groupe central, il est ultra-minoritaire, ajoute-t-elle. La Chine a lancé il y a quelques jours une camp...
2025-10-08
14 min
Engadget News + Next
Google's Chief Scientist of Quantum Hardware won the Nobel Prize in Physics, Mastodon is adding Bluesky-like starter packs, and California banned loud commercials on streaming platforms
-The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded Google's Chief Scientist of Quantum Hardware, Michel Devoret, the Nobel Prize in Physics. alongside former Google employee John Martinis, and University of California, Berkeley professor John Clarke. The award recognizes "the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantization in an electric circuit." -Mastodon, the federated social network built on ActivityPub, is taking cues from Bluesky and introducing its own version of the social platform's "Starter Packs." The hope is that Mastodon's "Packs" will make it easier to find people to follow when you first join a server...
2025-10-08
07 min
Daily Sync
Nobel Physics Prize Quantum Computing Breakthrough - Gold Hits $4,000 - 'Enshittification' Debate
2025 Nobel Prize in Physics quantum tunneling: https://arstechnica.com/science/2025/10/2025-nobel-prize-in-physics-awarded-for-macroscale-quantum-tunneling/EU steel tariff threatens UK industry: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy875px79poTed Cruz targets Wikipedia ideological bias: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/10/ted-cruz-picks-a-fight-with-wikipedia-accusing-platform-of-left-wing-bias/Tesla Standard Range Model 3 Model Y: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2025/10/teslas-new-cut-price-evs-a-39990-model-y-and-36990-model-3/Google Gemini browser AI model: https://www.theverge.com/news/795463/google-computer-use-gemini-ai-model-agentsMrBeast fears AI impact on creators: https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/10/07/1913224/youtubes-biggest-star-mrbeast-fears-ai-could-impact-millions-of-creators-after-sora-launchCory Doctorow enshittification debate: https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/10/08/0014252/can-cory-doctorows-enshittification-transform-the-tech-industry-debateAnthropic IBM...
2025-10-08
07 min
Les Voix de la Tech
La dépêche | Michel Devoret, Prix Nobel de physique 2025 : Google peut-il vraiment s’enorgueillir d’un 3è Nobel en deux ans ?
“La dépêche“, le nouveau rendez-vous Tech quotidien du podcast "Les Voix de la Tech" avec Benjamin Vincent, à déguster dès 6h45, avec le premier café du matin.Mercredi 8 octobre 2025.Michel Devoret, Prix Nobel de physique 2025 : Google peut-il vraiment s’enorgueillir d’un 3è Nobel en deux ans ?Deux Prix Nobel l'an dernier, en physique et en chimie, un 3è Prix Nobel, hier, en physique notamment pour le Français Michel Devoret, pour - au total - cinq scientifiques qui travaillent ou ont travaillé pour Google (Brain, Deepmind et Quantum AI) : le géant de Mountain Vie...
2025-10-08
06 min
Nobel Prize Conversations
First reactions | John Martinis, Nobel Prize in Physics 2025 | Telephone interview
“My wife is very kind to me, so she didn’t wake me up for a couple of hours.” John Martinis was sleeping when news of his Nobel Prize in Physics broke, but his wife Jean was up reading late into the night and received the calls, letting him sleep on. In this conversation with the Nobel Prize’s Adam Smith, he talks about the excitement of learning how to investigate problems with his co-laureates John Clarke and Michel Devoret, four decades ago, and how that experience taught him what to aim for when building labs in academic and industry...
2025-10-07
08 min