Quantum aspects of life
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Imperial College Press
c2008
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Online-Zugang: | FAW01 FAW02 Volltext |
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Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index Pt. 1. Emergence and complexity. A quantum origin of life? / Paul C. W. Davies. 2. Quantum mechanics and emergence / Seth Lloyd -- pt. 2. Quantum mechanisms in biology. 3. Quantum coherence and the search for the first replicator / Jim Al-Khalili and Johnjoe McFadden. 4. Ultrafast quantum dynamics in photosynthesis / Alexandra Olaya Castro ... [et al.]. 5. Modelling quantum decoherence in biomolecules / Jacques Bothma, Joel Gilmore, and Ross H. McKenzie -- pt. 3. The biological evidence. 6. Molecular evolution : a role for quantum mechanics in the dynamics of molecular machines that read and write DNA / Anita Goel. 7. Memory depends on the cytoskeleton, but is it quantum? / Andreas Mershin and Dimitri V. Nanopoulos. 8. Quantum metabolism and allometric scaling relations in biology / Lloyd Demetrius. 9. Spectroscopy of the genetic code / Jim D. Bashford and Peter D. Jarvis. 10. Towards understanding the origin of genetic languages / Apoorva D. Patel -- pt. 4. Artificial quantum life. 11. Can arbitrary quantum systems undergo self-replication? / Arun K. Pati and Samuel L. Braunstein. 12. A semi-quantum version of the game of life / Adrian P. Flitney and Derek Abbott. 13. Evolutionary stability in quantum games / Azhar Iqbal and Taksu Cheon. 14. Quantum transmemetic intelligence / Edward W. Piotrowski and Jan Stadkowski -- pt. 5. The debate. 15. Dreams versus reality : plenary debate session on quantum computing. 16. Plenary debate: quantum effects in biology : trivial or not? 17. Nontrivial quantum effects in biology: a skeptical physicists' view / Howard Wiseman and Jens Eisert. 18. That's life! -- the geometry of [pi] electron clouds / Stuart Hameroff This book presents the hotly debated question of whether quantum mechanics plays a non-trivial role in biology. In a timely way, it sets out a distinct quantum biology agenda. The burgeoning fields of nanotechnology, biotechnology, quantum technology, and quantum information processing are now strongly converging. The acronym BINS, for Bio-Info-Nano-Systems, has been coined to describe the synergetic interface of these several disciplines. The living cell is an information replicating and processing system that is replete with naturally-evolved nanomachines, which at some level require a quantum mechanical description. As quantum engineering and nanotechnology meet, increasing use will be made of biological structures, or hybrids of biological and fabricated systems, for producing novel devices for information storage and processing and other tasks. An understanding of these systems at a quantum mechanical level will be indispensable |
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Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (xxvi, 442 p.) |
ISBN: | 1848162553 1848162677 9781848162556 9781848162679 |