These forums have been archived and are now read-only.

The new forums are live and can be found at https://forums.eveonline.com/

Out of Pod Experience

 
  • Topic is locked indefinitely.
12Next page
 

Scientists now closer to being reliably able to 'teleport' information

Author
Esna Pitoojee
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#1 - 2014-05-30 06:26:44 UTC
Article

So, apparently they've got the success rate way, way up with this kind of thing, although the process involves electrons "trapped in diamonds at extremely low temperature". Still, one step closer...

RELEVANT EVE LORE FACTOID: Quantum entanglement, used in this 'teleportation', is the way our "fluid router" communications function in EVE lore. This is why - in addition to being instantaneous despite vast stellar distances - it is virtually impossible to 'jam' our communications: The entanglement effectively functions 'around' rather than 'through' the space between two points; any noise between those two points is irrelevant so long as the entangled link holds up.
Graygor
Federal Navy Academy
Gallente Federation
#2 - 2014-05-30 06:33:19 UTC
Good. Maybe then i wont lag when i play games with my friends online.

Still, this news gives me a massive nerd hard on for all forms of tech.

"I think you should buy a new Mayan calendar. Mine has muscle cars on it." -ย Kenneth O'Hara

"I dont think that can happen, you can see Gray has his invuln field on in his portrait." - Commissar "Cake" Kate

Xenuria
#3 - 2014-05-30 18:24:17 UTC
From my experience the overwhelming majority of Teleportation technologies result in radiation so horrible that if something living does make it through it won't last long. The ONLY real way to make the tech work is to use quantum methods of traversal.
Even then you are dealing with factors such as temperature change and sever psychological trauma for anybody not specifically conditioned for such a thing.

It should be noted that we have no idea how to condition or prepare somebody for that yet.
Reaver Glitterstim
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#4 - 2014-05-31 06:14:53 UTC
Xenuria wrote:
From my experience the overwhelming majority of Teleportation technologies result in radiation so horrible that if something living does make it through it won't last long. The ONLY real way to make the tech work is to use quantum methods of traversal.
Even then you are dealing with factors such as temperature change and sever psychological trauma for anybody not specifically conditioned for such a thing.

It should be noted that we have no idea how to condition or prepare somebody for that yet.
Maybe we should work on moving from teleporting leptons to atoms, and eventually molecules, before we start assuming there will be repercussions preventing safe teleportation of living creatures.

FT Diomedes: "Reaver, sometimes I wonder what you are thinking when you sit down to post."

Frostys Virpio: "We have to give it to him that he does put more effort than the vast majority in his idea but damn does it sometime come out of nowhere."

Matilda Cecilia Fock
Pator Tech School
Minmatar Republic
#5 - 2014-05-31 07:22:40 UTC  |  Edited by: Matilda Cecilia Fock
...and now, a few fugly facts:

- the "outgoing" qubit is destroyed in the process of reading, and so each pair only can be used once
- quantum pairs are created together, then they are physically seperated
- albeit a qubit haves endless potential states, only one of them can be transmitted at a time (and then the qubit is destroyed)

Q: Should we be worried? A: Nope. (...) Worry a lot if Fozzie, Masterplan, Rise, Veritas, Bettik, Ytterbium, Scarpia, Arrow, or even Greyscale leaves. Worry a little if Punkturis, karkur, SoniClover, Affinity, Goliath, or Xhagen leaves.

Bagrat Skalski
Koinuun Kotei
#6 - 2014-05-31 08:01:28 UTC  |  Edited by: Bagrat Skalski
I would "entangle" the other part of the space with my own state so I would be in two places in one time, shearing my state with two parts of space, then I would "extangle" the state that is here, and I would leave intact the other state, would it be a teleportation?
Unfortunately its a Sci-fi, not an actual science. Sad

Information send to the other part of space can be send only with a light speed, and the facility to entangle the other me would need less than light speed to move there.
Black Panpher
CastleKickers
Rote Kapelle
#7 - 2014-05-31 14:02:06 UTC
First teleportation via carrying atoms over a radio wave, then laser and now diamonds.
This all seems pretty primitive to me, I'll wait for wormhole technology.

Akita T
Caldari Navy Volunteer Task Force
#8 - 2014-05-31 15:13:04 UTC
Teleporters are fine and dandy in theory, but a replicator has more practical applications and it can pretty much double for a pseudo-teleporter (as far as practical//pragmatic aspects are concerned anyway).
Eurydia Vespasian
Storm Hunters
#9 - 2014-05-31 15:27:58 UTC
anyone here that wants to demonstrate teleportation can feel free to teleport some isk into my wallet. Blink
Bagrat Skalski
Koinuun Kotei
#10 - 2014-05-31 16:53:20 UTC  |  Edited by: Bagrat Skalski
Eurydia Vespasian wrote:
anyone here that wants to demonstrate teleportation can feel free to teleport some isk into my wallet. Blink


In virtual reality you can teleport anything anywhere, you are making up the rules, but in real, the rules rule you. Maybe in Matrix we would be able to make and do anything. Lol
Reaver Glitterstim
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#11 - 2014-05-31 18:49:07 UTC
If I found out we lived in the Matrix, I would learn how to work the thing and then happily stay inside. After a quick look at what lies on the outside, I have to believe these parasitic robots are pretty benevolent. Guess it's not really parasitism if I'm willing, eh?


Bagrat Skalski wrote:
Information send to the other part of space can be send only with a light speed, and the facility to entangle the other me would need less than light speed to move there.
But once it had arrived, it could remain in place and perform more entanglements.

FT Diomedes: "Reaver, sometimes I wonder what you are thinking when you sit down to post."

Frostys Virpio: "We have to give it to him that he does put more effort than the vast majority in his idea but damn does it sometime come out of nowhere."

Riyria Twinpeaks
Perkone
Caldari State
#12 - 2014-05-31 19:19:26 UTC  |  Edited by: Riyria Twinpeaks
Can you even entangle particles from a distance? I always thought you have to create them entangled and then move them apart from each other.
Reaver Glitterstim
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#13 - 2014-05-31 19:23:25 UTC
Riyria Twinpeaks wrote:
Can you even entangle particles from a distance? I always thought you have to create them entangled and them move them apart from each other.
You might have to operate both ends, but it is this "entanglement" which demonstrates really clearly that things that seem far apart by our observations sometimes or perhaps always are actually in direct contact with each other.

FT Diomedes: "Reaver, sometimes I wonder what you are thinking when you sit down to post."

Frostys Virpio: "We have to give it to him that he does put more effort than the vast majority in his idea but damn does it sometime come out of nowhere."

Mizhir
Devara Biotech
#14 - 2014-05-31 19:23:40 UTC
Riyria Twinpeaks wrote:
Can you even entangle particles from a distance? I always thought you have to create them entangled and them move them apart from each other.


When I read about this, all I thought about was remote hugs Lol

โค๏ธ๏ธ๐Ÿ’›๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ’™๐Ÿ’œ

Riyria Twinpeaks
Perkone
Caldari State
#15 - 2014-05-31 20:26:36 UTC  |  Edited by: Riyria Twinpeaks
Reaver Glitterstim wrote:
Riyria Twinpeaks wrote:
Can you even entangle particles from a distance? I always thought you have to create them entangled and them move them apart from each other.
You might have to operate both ends, but it is this "entanglement" which demonstrates really clearly that things that seem far apart by our observations sometimes or perhaps always are actually in direct contact with each other.


Edit: I forgot to mention: This is a fascinating way to look at entanglement. It never occured to me! /Edit

Well, on that submicroscopic level I already have a hard time grasping what "direct contact" means.
I mean, you don't have surfaces touching each other anymore, right? You have waveforms interferring with each other and forces between particles, but I really don't know what "contact" can mean in that context besides "being in close proximity" and maybe "short ranging forces dominate", whatever those forces might be (I'm not really that knowledgable in physics.).

That said, if you can make use of that "direct contact" property to entangle particles with each other which look distant to our observations, then why can't you use that same property to transmit information directly?

But, back to entanglement: It seems I already don't understand something fundamental about entanglement. What I knew as entanglement so far were pairs of particles which are guaranteed to have "opposite" values in a certain property. For example polarization for photons.. or spin of electrons.
This manifests when you observe/measure one of the particle pair. In the moment of measurement you collapse the wave function of that particle and it changes from being in a superposition of all possible states to having one definite state, for example "spin up" in the measured direction. With entangled particles that also means that the wave function of the partner particle collapses in the same instant, so that it is assuming the complementary value in that measured property.
That doesn't help in transmitting information though, as you can't notice any change without measurement, so you can't magically know that the particle on the other end was measured now.

If you could -change- one of those properties in an entangled particle, so that the partner particle would follow through with the complementary change, that'd be nice for transmitting information, but I didn't know that was possible.

.. what a long post to say "I don't know how it works" .. haha.
Reaver Glitterstim
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#16 - 2014-05-31 20:39:44 UTC
I don't know how it works, either.

One helpful tidbit can be to learn to accept that there are no solid surfaces anywhere, only fields of exponentially diminishing potential from an apparent but illusory epicenter. When you touch a "surface", there is a range within which you are able to press--more pressure can put your finger further into the surface. The amount it goes in is just so tiny we cannot come close to perceiving it. But you can play with a much "weaker" repulsive force, that is, a repulsive force that diminishes at a much lower rate with distance from the center. When you press equal poles of two magnets together, they repel each other, and the closer you press them, the stronger the repulsive force becomes. It's the same thing as the surfaces around you, but on a larger scale.

FT Diomedes: "Reaver, sometimes I wonder what you are thinking when you sit down to post."

Frostys Virpio: "We have to give it to him that he does put more effort than the vast majority in his idea but damn does it sometime come out of nowhere."

Riyria Twinpeaks
Perkone
Caldari State
#17 - 2014-05-31 20:45:27 UTC
Yes, that part I get. But I don't understand how you'd define "contact" under those circumstances. :)
Reaver Glitterstim
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#18 - 2014-05-31 21:05:27 UTC
The magnets are always in contact with each other. They are affecting one another. That's what contact is. If I push you or the magnet repels another magnet, it's a very similar effect.

FT Diomedes: "Reaver, sometimes I wonder what you are thinking when you sit down to post."

Frostys Virpio: "We have to give it to him that he does put more effort than the vast majority in his idea but damn does it sometime come out of nowhere."

Bagrat Skalski
Koinuun Kotei
#19 - 2014-05-31 21:23:57 UTC
Quote:
what "direct contact" means.


I am thinking about it like it would be one medium that is non uniform in nature.
Riyria Twinpeaks
Perkone
Caldari State
#20 - 2014-05-31 21:55:00 UTC  |  Edited by: Riyria Twinpeaks
Reaver Glitterstim wrote:
The magnets are always in contact with each other. They are affecting one another. That's what contact is. If I push you or the magnet repels another magnet, it's a very similar effect.


But if it is "just" that, then you'd have to say that, for example, our milky way and the andromeda galaxis are in contact, too, because they affect each other due to gravity.
Maybe an extreme example, but that can't very well be the sort of contact you meant with regards to entanglement. Because, going back to magnets, when repelling one magnet with the other, the repelling force doesn't take effect immediately, as far as I know. If you move the one magnet, the other one "feels" the change in the magnetic field a miniscule amount of time later, because the changes of the magnetic field don't travel faster than with the speed of light.

That was the reason for my question originally, with regards to your statement about the possible direct contact between entangled particles before. What is direct contact in that case?

Originally I thought you might mean that we only perceive them very distant from each other, while they may be in fact very close to each other, in a way which (so far) is outside our observation capabilities. Different dimensions or such fancy things. Who knows, maybe those two particles are actually only one particle and we just can't see this fact.
Ok ok, that's a little crazy now, haha.
12Next page