如果我们建造了一台真正的大型计算机会怎样?

IF 2.6 4区 工程技术 Q2 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC IEEE Spectrum Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1109/MSPEC.2024.10458074
Karl Schroeder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

多年来,计算机的功能越来越强大,其组件的体积也越来越小。但是,计算机到底能有多大呢?我们能把一个星球变成一台计算机吗?- 在考虑这些问题时,我们已经超越了一般的技术预测,进入了完全猜测的领域。因此,IEEE Spectrum 偶尔也会涉足科幻小说领域,卡尔-施罗德(Karl Schroeder)撰写了一篇短篇小说,讲述了用水星制造计算机的意想不到的结果。与一般的 Spectrum 文章相比,我们的报道要深入得多,因此我们对 Schroeder 的故事进行了背景分析和注释,以说明它是如何以真实的科学技术为基础的。- 这并不是第一部考虑到这种可能性的小说作品。在《银河系漫游指南》(The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy)中,道格拉斯-亚当斯(Douglas Adams)就曾想象过一个可以用作处理器的世界。现实世界的科学家们也对这一想法很感兴趣。宾夕法尼亚州立大学地外智能中心主任杰森-赖特(Jason Wright)认真思考过计算机能有多大。他指出,行星规模的计算机可能会成为搜寻地外智慧生物的重要工具。"莱特说:"在SETI中,我们试图寻找任何文明都可能做的通用事情,而计算感觉非常通用。"莱特说:"如果这是真的,那么就会有人拥有最大的计算机,想想它可能有多大,以及他们可能会遇到什么限制,这很有趣。- 当然,超大型计算机也有物理限制。例如,行星级计算机很可能不是像地球这样的固体物体。"莱特说:"这样会变得太热。任何计算都会产生废热。如今的微芯片和数据中心 "面临着巨大的热量管理问题"。- 此外,牛津大学人类未来研究所高级研究员安德斯-桑德伯格(Anders Sandberg)说,如果行星级计算机的质量过多地集中在一个地方,"它可能会在自身重量的作用下发生内爆"。"牛津大学人类未来研究所高级研究员安德斯-桑德伯格说:"有比钢铁更坚固的材料,但分子键是有极限的。- 相反,将行星转化为计算机可能需要分散其质量。与其让一个单一的物体承受各种机械应力,不如把计算机分解成一个个球状的节点,即所谓的戴森蜂群。这种策略还能更容易地收集太阳能。- 行星级计算机有哪些用途?桑德伯格指出,为上传的大脑提供虚拟现实是一种可能。麻省理工学院量子物理学家塞斯-劳埃德(Seth Lloyd)说,生态系统的量子模拟是另一种可能。这就引出了我们的故事......
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What If We Built a Really Big Computer?
COMPUTERS HAVE GROWN more and more powerful over the years by pushing the limits of how small their components can be. But just how big can a computer get? Could we turn a planet into a computer, and if so, what would we do with it? • In considering such questions, we go beyond normal technological projections and into the realm of outright speculation. So IEEE Spectrum is making one of its occasional forays into science fiction, with a short story by Karl Schroeder about the unexpected outcomes of building a computer out of planet Mercury. Because we're going much farther afield than in a typical Spectrum article, we've contextualized and annotated Schroeder's story to show how it's still grounded in real science and technology. • This isn't the first work of fiction to consider such possibilities. In “The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,” Douglas Adams famously imagined a world constructed to serve as a processor. Real-world scientists are also intrigued by the idea. Jason Wright, director of the Penn State Extraterrestrial Intelligence Center, has given serious thought to how large a computer can get. A planet-scale computer, he notes, might feature in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. “In SETI, we try to look for generic things any civilization might do, and computation feels pretty generic,” Wright says. “If that's true, then someone's got the biggest computer, and it's interesting to think about how big it could be, and what limits they might hit.” • There are, of course, physical constraints on very large computers. For instance, a planet-scale computer likely could not be a solid object like Earth. “It would just get too hot,” Wright says. Any computation generates waste heat. Today's microchips and data centers “face huge problems with heat management.” • In addition, if too much of a planet-scale computer's mass is concentrated in one place, “it could implode under its own weight,” says Anders Sandberg, a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute. “There are materials stronger than steel, but molecular bonds have a limit.” • Instead, converting a planet into a computer will likely involve spreading out its mass. Rather than have a single object that would be subject to all kinds of mechanical stresses, it would be better to break the computer up into a globular flotilla of nodes, known as a Dyson swarm. This strategy would also make it easier to harvest solar energy. • What uses might a planet-scale computer have? Hosting virtual realities for uploaded minds is one possibility, Sandberg notes. Quantum simulation of ecosystems is another, says Seth Lloyd, a quantum physicist at MIT. Which brings us to our story…
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来源期刊
IEEE Spectrum
IEEE Spectrum 工程技术-工程:电子与电气
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
254
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: IEEE Spectrum Magazine, the flagship publication of the IEEE, explores the development, applications and implications of new technologies. It anticipates trends in engineering, science, and technology, and provides a forum for understanding, discussion and leadership in these areas. IEEE Spectrum is the world''s leading engineering and scientific magazine. Read by over 300,000 engineers worldwide, Spectrum provides international coverage of all technical issues and advances in computers, communications, and electronics. Written in clear, concise language for the non-specialist, Spectrum''s high editorial standards and worldwide resources ensure technical accuracy and state-of-the-art relevance.
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