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Explore science like never before - accessible, thrilling, and packed with awe-inspiring moments. Fuel your curiosity with 100s of free, curated STEM audio shows . Download The Turing App on the Apple App Store, Google Play Store or listen at https://theturingapp.com/ TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 - The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics Announcement 04:20 - Superconductors & The Dance of Cooper Pairs 10:30 - The Berkeley Experiment: Escaping the Well 17:50 - The Birth of the "Artificial Atom" 20:40 - From Lab Experiment to Quantum Supremacy The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret, and John M. Martinis for the discovery of macroscopic quantum tunneling. In this video, we breakdown how these scientists proved that the bizarre rules of quantum mechanics don't just apply to microscopic particles, but to large, hand-held electrical circuits as well. This breakdown covers the fascinating journey from the mid-1980s UC Berkeley experiments to the modern age of quantum computing. We explain how the laureates engineered a system to isolate a fragile quantum state from the noisy ordinary world. You will learn about: Macroscopic Quantum Tunneling: How a tiny chip containing billions of particles performed the "impossible" feat of tunneling through an energy barrier. The Physics of Superconductors: Understanding Cooper pairs, where electrons move in a synchronized dance to create a single, massive quantum entity. The Artificial Atom: How this discovery created a device with discrete energy levels, acting as a "laboratory cousin" to Schrödinger’s cat. Whether you are a physics student or a science enthusiast, this video explains how this foundational work paved the way for the qubits and transmons used in today's quantum computers by companies like Google and IBM. #NobelPrize #QuantumPhysics #QuantumComputing #nobelphysics