by Susanne Posel
May 30, 2014
from
OccupyCorporatism Website
Physicists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience (KIN) have
published a report (Unconditional
Quantum Teleportation Between Distant Solid-State Quantum Bits)
stating that they were able to transport quantum data with regard to
the,
"spin state of an electron to
another electron about 10 feet away."
Researchers at the Delft University
of Technology (DUT) say
they have teleported a quantum bit
which can be represented in 2 places at once.
This discovery is being hailed as a furtherance of quantum
computing; which is still theoretical at this stage.
DUT scientists explain:
"To achieve teleportation the
scientists made use of an unusual phenomenon: entanglement.
'Entanglement is arguably the
strangest and most intriguing consequence of the laws of
quantum mechanics,' argues the head of the research project,
Prof. Ronald Hanson.
'When two particles become
entangled, their identities merge: their collective state is
precisely determined but the individual identity of each of
the particles has disappeared.
The entangled particles behave
as one, even when separated by a large distance. The
distance in our tests was three meters, but in theory the
particles could be on either side of the universe.
Einstein didn't believe in this
prediction and called it 'spooky action at a distance'.
Numerous experiments, on the other
hand, agree with the existence of entanglement."
Ronald Hanson, professor at DUT
and lead researcher stated:
"Entanglement is arguably the
strangest and most intriguing consequence of the laws of
quantum mechanics.
When two particles become entangled,
their identities merge: their collective state is precisely
determined but the individual identity of each of the particles
has disappeared."
Because information can be teleported,
the next question becomes:
can humans be beamed up like in Star
Trek?
Hanson replied:
"There is a big race going on
between five or six groups to prove Einstein wrong. There is one
very big fish.
If you believe we are nothing more
than a collection of atoms strung together in a particular way,
then in principle it should be possible to teleport ourselves
from one place to another.
In practice it's extremely unlikely,
but to say it can never work is very dangerous."
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