We are at the beginning of a revolution. I’ve been going on about quantum computing for as long as I’ve been writing, but it has always been in the future tense. Nothing useful could be done as researchers stepped through all the foothills on their way to the peaks, but now the summit is in view. Just two months ago, we reported on a quantum computer that mashed digital aspects of quantum computing together with analog aspects. In doing so, the researchers came up with a more robust architecture. While this is promising, it’s not much more than what others have done with different types of quantum computers.
Now, the same device has been used to do real quantum chemistry calculations, and it seems scarily accurate.
Chemistry? I came here for physics
As any physicist will tell you, chemistry is just physics. And as any chemist will tell you, unsolvable equations are worthless when you’re staring down the barrel of a synthesis that has gone wrong (I’ve paraphrased what a chemist would actually say, which Ars editorial standards would not allow me to print).
Both physicists and chemists are right. Molecules have a fixed shape, they require certain fixed amounts of energy to pull apart, and they release or require a given amount of energy to react. The rate at which a reaction occurs, for instance, is finely dependent on the structure of the molecules involved.
And a molecule’s structure is set by the rules of quantum mechanics. In principle, if you could solve Schroedinger’s equation for a molecule, you would know everything about it. You would know how much energy it takes to pull it apart and, therefore, how quickly it would undergo a given reaction. This would then open the way to changing things in the environment and allow us to determine (for example) how a catalyst changes the molecule’s shape to make it easier to pull apart.

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