| 
  
   
    
     
      
       
        Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science  
        Department of Mechanical Engineering
       
      
      | 
     
    
     | 
      
       
        6.050J/2.110J – Information, Entropy and Computation – 
        Spring 2016 
       
      
      | 
     
    
   | 
 
Unit 10:  Physical Systems
Schedule
 
  | Lecture | 
  Thursday, Apr 14, 2016, 1:00 PM | 
  Room 1-136 | 
 
 
  | Recitation | 
  Thursday, Apr 21, 2016, 1:00 PM | 
  Room 1-136 | 
 
 
Lecture Handouts
 Students who for any reason did not receive these items can pick them up in 
 Room 38-344.  Most of this material is also available on the 6.050J/2.110J 
 Web site 
 http://mtlsites.mit.edu/Courses/6.050.
 - Unit 10 Resources (this page)
 
 - 
  6.050J/2.110J Notes
  
   - Chapter 10, Physical Systems
 
   - 
    Andrew M. Steane and Wim van Dam, “Physicists Triumph at Guess My 
    Number,” Physics Today, pp. 35-39; February, 2000.  A charming 
    introduction to superdense coding, in which the transmission of a 
    classical bit can convey more than a bit of information if the channel is 
    set up in advance using quantum entanglement.  
    PDF
   
 
  
  
Reading Assignment
Resources
Technical
 There are many Web sites that discuss quantum mechanics.  Naturally, some 
 are better than others, and some assume a higher level of expertise on the 
 part of visitors than others.  Here are a few.
Historical
 The pioneers of quantum mechanics
Books
 - 
  There are many excellent textbooks dealing with quantum mechanics at the 
  graduate or advanced undergraduate level.  Unfortunately there is little if 
  anything in the way of good explanations at a simpler level.  An excellent 
  set of notes, by MIT faculty, for a graduate course, is P. L. Hagelstein, 
  S. D. Senturia, and T. P. Orlando, “Introductory Applied Quantum and 
  Statistical Physics,” Department of Electrical Engineering and 
  Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA; 2000.
 
 
 - 
  The predictions of quantum mechanics have been verified repeatedly in 
  careful experiments, and the theory has been used effectively in the design 
  of practical systems.  Nevertheless, it cannot be explained in terms that 
  are compatible with everyday experience.  The field that tries to do this 
  is sometimes called the “philosophy of quantum mechanics.”  One of the 
  best, most readable books describing the status of such attempts is by John 
  Polkinghorne, “Quantum Theory: A Very Short Introduction,” 
  Oxford University Press, Oxford, U. K.; 2002.
 
 
Help Wanted
 6.050J/2.110J students: be the first to suggest a resource, for example a 
 useful Web site or a good book or article, to add to the list above.  Send 
 your suggestion by e-mail during Spring 2016 to 6.050-staff at mit.edu.
 6.050J/2.110J home page | 
 Spring 2016 | 
 Search | 
 Comments and inquiries
Click here for information on MIT Accessibility