Overview

In this project we will investigate the complex interrelationship between the nature of time and the distinct ways in which the passage of time and quantum physics manifest in inanimate objects compared to living organisms. Expanding the theoretical and philosophical frameworks used to understand the ‘arrow of time’ and reversibility, the project will encompass three theoretical investigations, an experimental approach using live cells, and a philosophical exploration of the deeper meanings of time.

The emerging field of quantum biology seeks to understand whether quantum mechanics plays a role in biological processes. There is growing evidence from recent research that phenomena such as photosynthesis, respiration, bird navigation – and even the way we think – are all influenced by quantum mechanics.

In ‘Life on the Edge’, we are exploring a key question in quantum biology. While time as we experience it only flows forwards, at the scale of quantum physics, time is reversible – with processes making just as much sense when viewed forward or backwards through time. However we also know that many complex processes are irreversible. How these irreversible processes emerge from smaller reversible building blocks is not fully understood, but may have implications for our understanding of life itself.

‘Life on the Edge’ is funded by a $3 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation – the largest philanthropic gift ever received by the University of Surrey. The project involves a research team drawn from across six universities in the UK and US, but hosted by the Quantum Foundations Centre at Surrey. The team is an interdisciplinary group of researchers with expertise in quantum physics, applied mathematics, computational chemistry, experimental molecular biology and philosophy.

Quantum Biology

Here is a short video introducing this project funded by the John Templeton Foundation: Life on the Edge: Quantum Thermodynamics, Quantum Biology and the Arrow of Time.

Team leaders

Professor Jim Al-Khalili

Principal Investigator

Jim Al-Khalili CBE FRS is a theoretical physicist who is currently Distinguished Professor Emeritus.He received his PhD in theoretical nuclear physics from Surrey in 1989 and then spent two years as an SERC Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University College London before returning to Surrey in 1991. He was appointed lecturer in 1992 and, in 1994, was awarded an EPSRC Advanced Re...

Dr Andrea Rocco

Principal Investigator

Andrea Rocco (MInstP, FHEA, FRSB) graduated in Physics at the University of Pisa (Italy) in 1994, discussing a thesis in quantum field theory. In 1998 he obtained his PhD in Physics from the University of North Texas (USA), where he focused on the role of stochastic processes in classical and quantum mechanical systems.Between 1998 and 2007 Andrea held postdoctoral positions at ...

Partners

This project is being led at the University of Surrey in collaboration with the Universities of Oxford and Bristol in the UK and University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), University of California San Diego (UC San Diego) and Arizona State University in the USA.

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University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo
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University of Oxford logo
Arizona State University logo
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo
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