Steel, Perspex, timer display, and LCD
screen
41 5/16 x 32 5/16 x 15 3/4"
(105 x 82 x 40 cm)
According to the many-worlds theory,
first posited by Hugh Everett in 1957,
although we observe time as linear,
diverging timelines occur in parallel
worlds, with each possible outcome
having a different probability. In the
world of quantum computing, this concept
is reflected in the superposition principle,
the ability of particles to be in two or
more states at once, which is used to
perform massive parallel processing.
The 5th Dimensional Camera explores
how we might see all these different
worlds at the same time, in a metaphorical
many-lensed object. All the possible
ramifications of any decision or action
or day would theoretically be visible,
thus visualizing all the worlds that branch
out from our linear timeline; the longer
the period for which the camera’s timer
is set, the more time there is for new
worlds to branch out from our own and,
in turn, the more novel some of those
worlds are likely to be. The designers
hope that the camera will make tangible
the wider implications of quantum
computing and its effects on our world.