鈥淨uantum mechanics is just so weird, and when you go deeper into it, it鈥檚 even weirder,鈥 admits professor of physics & astronomy Steven White, whose simulation of a quantum spin liquid graces the cover of Science magazine鈥檚 June 3 issue. (Steve Zylius)

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Acclaimed for a breakthrough algorithm, physicist Steven White is now first to model a new state of matter.

When a firefighter visited Steven White鈥檚 kindergarten class, the 5-year-old didn鈥檛 want to try on his big helmet. He wanted to know what velocity of water his hose could spray. When a musician visited, the boy wanted to know the frequencies of the sound waves from her instrument.

The teacher was so concerned she called his parents and advised them to stop putting so much academic pressure their young son. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not us,鈥 they replied. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all him.鈥

White, now 51 and a globally recognized UC Irvine professor of physics & astronomy, says his physicist uncle may have had something to do with his early scientific inquiries. By second grade, White had decided he wanted to be a physicist too.

Fast-forward almost five decades, and that childhood dream has more than come true. As a young UCI assistant professor in 1992, White published a pioneering computer that helped crack mechanics conundrums and has since led to a whole new field of computational physics.

This month, his latest breakthrough, successfully modeling a quantum spin liquid, on the cover of Science magazine. Such a liquid is a new invisible to the naked eye that experts more than 30 years ago hypothesized might exist. It could be a key to understanding superconductivity and building quantum computers. White and graduate student Simeng Yan - in collaboration with a Princeton University physicist - created the first realistic computer model conclusively identifying a quantum spin liquid, depicting it as a wedge of darkness above a floating red and blue lattice of atomic connections.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a testament to Steve鈥檚 continued groundbreaking work,鈥 says department chair Bill  Parker. 鈥淏eing on the cover of Science 鈥 the largest, most respected interdisciplinary journal in the world 鈥 is a great honor.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 great!鈥 agrees White, a cheerful, down-to-earth man who admits his work is hard for even fellow to understand. He tries valiantly to translate it via multicolored computer simulations, guest talks at major universities and patient conversations with nonscientists.

鈥淨uantum mechanics is just so weird, and when you go deeper into it, it鈥檚 even weirder,鈥 he says. Consider the title of the Science paper: 鈥淪pin-Liquid Ground State of the S = 1/2 Kagome Heisenberg Antiferromagnet.鈥

White pulls out all the stops in a recent conversation, carefully explaining how he and Yan were able to model the super chilled liquid form of infinitesimally small, or quantum-sized, antimagnetic particles. To illustrate, he uses old black and white movies, a Japanese basket-weaving pattern known as kagome, and pictures of a green veined rock called herbertsmithite.

There is no immediately useful purpose for a quantum spin liquid, but White and fellow physicists think that if it is present in the mineral, they might some day be able to synthesize crystals to make highly efficient 鈥渜uantum鈥 computers. But it鈥檚 a joy to have cracked a riddle in elegant, fairly simple form that鈥檚 consumed him and other physicists for more than three decades.

The latest work, funded by the National Science Foundation, builds upon his success creating the density matrix renormalization group algorithm, which was appreciated right away by experts, and whose impact has steadily grown. Last summer, more than 200 physicists met to discuss the latest developments in quantum physics related to DMRG.

鈥淲hite鈥檚 seminal DMRG work continues to have a broad impact in many areas, including strongly correlated electron systems, where I鈥檝e been fortunate to work with him, and for a range of problems in statistical mechanics, quantum chemistry and quantum information,鈥 says Douglas Scalapino, research professor of physics at UC Santa Barbara, whose primary scientific interests are superconductivity and magnetism. 鈥淚t represents an important break through that has created a new direction in computational physics.鈥

White hasn't direclty profited from the widespread use of his algorithm and says making money isn鈥檛 the point. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what my dad always wants to know,鈥 he jokes.

鈥淓instein didn鈥檛 make a penny鈥 off his theoretical work that led directly to lasers, he notes, not that he would ever compare himself to Albert Einstein. But he is gratified by the recognition he has received from fellow physicists, including one very important one.
"My uncle? Well, he's very proud," says White.