Scientists Find Method To Reliably Teleport Data 202
An anonymous reader writes "Scientists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience say they've managed to reliably teleport quantum information stored in one bit of diamond to another sitting three meters away (abstract, pre-print) . Now, their goal is to extend the range over a distance of a kilometer. '[R]eliability of quantum teleportation has been elusive. For example, in 2009, University of Maryland physicists demonstrated the transfer of quantum information, but only one of every 100 million attempts succeeded, meaning that transferring a single bit of quantum information required roughly 10 minutes. In contrast, the scientists at Delft have achieved the ability "deterministically," meaning they can now teleport the quantum state of two entangled electrons accurately 100 percent of the time. They did so by producing qubits using electrons trapped in diamonds at extremely low temperatures. According to Dr. Hanson, the diamonds effectively create 'miniprisons' in which the electrons were held. The researchers were able to establish a spin, or value, for electrons, and then read the value reliably.'"
This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:5, Informative)
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Ignore previous reply (Score:3)
However, one of the main scientists associated with the Copenhagen interpretation, Niels Bohr, never had in mind the observer-induced collapse of the wave function, so that Schrödinger's cat did not pose any riddle to him. The cat would be either dead or alive long before the box is opened by a conscious observer.[6] Analysis of an actual experiment found that measurement alone (for example by a Geiger counter) is sufficient to collapse a quantum wave function before there is any conscious observation of the measurement.[7] The view that the "observation" is taken when a particle from the nucleus hits the detector can be developed into objective collapse theories. The thought experiment requires an "unconscious observation" by the detector in order for magnification to occur. In contrast, the many worlds approach denies that collapse ever occurs.
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But a Gieger counter sitting on some table is well coupled to the lab and environment around it and would allow for coherence as with any other interaction outside the closed system under consideration. If you could construct a way of isolating a cat from the environment, you could use the same method on a gieger counter, and then the effects of "unconscious observation" would go away in a closed system. Things like this have been tested on a smaller scale using detection methods that can be isolated or n
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Analysis of an actual experiment found that measurement alone (for example by a Geiger counter) is sufficient to collapse a quantum wave function before there is any conscious observation of the measurement
Haven't scientists been making progress with weak measurements of quantum states?
This comes to mind [physicsworld.com]
If we can create a reliable "weak" geiger counter, would that allow the particle to remain superposed?
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Also the idea that a photon constantly gets absorbed and reemitted in air is an incorrect understand of how electromagnetic waves get delayed, both in the classical electromagnetic sense and quantum sense.
Totally willing to admit that I'm wrong about this, but could you provide a citation? This interpretation of why light is slower in a medium was something I picked up in undergrad, and I never had it explicitly contradicted (my Ph.D was in a sub-field that required only the bare minimum quantum mechanics and solid state courses).
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"These actually have a use as "weak measurements", where if you don't actually exchange information, or a very little amount of information, .."
Very little, like a bit? And it's not totally reliable so we'd need a checksum?
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:4, Informative)
Anyone remember the movie "Mystery Men"? One of the characters in that movie summed up my feelings on modern quantum physics pretty nicely. He was "Invisible Boy." But he could only become invisible when no one was looking (not even himself), and no cameras were on him. The second that anything that could actually verify his ability tried to do so, he became visible again. This led to the obvious question "How do you know you have this power at all?" to which he relied "Well, I just feel it."
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I used to be called a tinfoil hatter. But Edward Snowden proved that even *I* wasn't paranoid enough.
You'll note that there has been a dearth on tinfoil hatter jokes since Snowden.
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One of the characters in that movie summed up my feelings on modern quantum physics pretty nicely.
Which are what? The rest of your post, relating the shenanigans of Invisible Boy, don't tell us what your feelings are.
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I'm going to write a full explanation of my thoughts on the subject with special ink on this piece of paper. But if you try to observe or measure the ink in any way, it will disappear. But the explanation is there. Trust me.
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QM is one of those things I never get around to fully grasping because 1) I use my time for learning many other things that more directly apply to my life, and 2) I have attempted to understand it and just don't get it.
So, could someone please explain why we think that the wave function of a particle is believed to exist in superposition until it is observed (which causes the wave function to collapse)? Why don't quantum physicists assume that the wave function was always collapsed and never in a superposi
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The double slit experiment. Even when you slow down the rate of photons going through the slit so no two can possibly interfere, they still present a self-interference pattern. If the function was "already collapsed" it could not interact with itself.
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IANAP, but I've hypothesized that you could also say that the slits influence the individual particle at the same time. I.e. the particle isn't interfering with itself, but is rather 'interfered' (I know) with by both slits.
If the particles that comprise the edges of the slits (or lack of those particles in the slits) have an influence on the trajectory of the fired particle that varies in a wave-like manner, the notion of 'interferes with itself' wouldn't be required to explain the resulting patterns. Agai
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...just as I accept that my hand is made of molecules which are made of atoms which are made of quarks and electrons...
And mostly empty space.
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:4, Informative)
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QM is one of those things I never get around to fully grasping because 1) I use my time for learning many other things that more directly apply to my life, and 2) I have attempted to understand it and just don't get it.
That's the thing. You can (a) understand QM or (b) try to learn more about QM, but one precludes the other.
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He just doesn't get the concept of a "thought experiment".
The point of the cat in the box is not the mechanism inside the box, but the inability of somebody outside the box to know the state inside the box.
The whole box and everything in it is a metaphore, it was never meant to be an actual reproducable experiment subject to literal interpretation.
Re:This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:5, Informative)
I realize you were making a joke based on a perception common in popular culture, but the truth is that the Schrodinger's Cat paradox has a simple resolution: the cat *cannot* be both alive and dead because the detector (which detects whether the decay has occurred and which triggers the release of the poison if the decay occurred) collapses the wave function of the particle. There's no such thing as a passive detector. So while a subatomic particle could indeed exist in a superposition of "decayed" vs. "not decayed," the second you go about asking the particle whether it's decayed (that is, when you set up the detector), the wave function collapses, and no superposition is possible.
You're presenting your interpretation as fact, and it's not. It's a possible scenario, but this thought experiment is designed explicitly to show a paradox that we have yet to resolve. What you describe is the "Copenhagen interpretation" which was proposed by Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg and others in 1924 to 1927. It states that quantum states are not fixed but probabilities. Just as you said, once any measurement is made the wave function collapses and the state is fixed in the classical sense. If this interpretation is true, then you are correct. But there are many other interpretations that have any equally valid chance of being correct.
In the "Many-Worlds" interpretation, the cat really is both alive and dead. When you open the box you become entangled with the cat (not literally, that would hurt) and one version of you perceives it as alive and another perceives it as dead. Both results occur, you experience both, but you remain unaware of your duplicate and he of you.
Einstein himself supported an entirely different interpretation called the "Ensemble interpretation" which basically just makes the entire thought experiment irrelevant. It's wacky and hard to explain so I'll just link to it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E... [wikipedia.org]
Anyways, I recommend reading up on Schrödinger's cat via Wikipedia or some other source. You're only incorrect in that you thought your explanation was the only one.
Oh, and full disclosure, I'm not a scientist, I just find this stuff incredibly interesting. Also it makes me sound smart at parties. Actually I don't get invited to parties... they say I ramble on about nonsense. Thank God for the many worlds theory... at least I'm popular somewhere.
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But why is it standard? There's no reason to believe its explanation is any more valid than the others other than, its the one that is most psychologically appealing because it most resembles our classical macroscopic world.
The best way to think of why it could be wrong is that, in order for you to make your argument, you are treating the observer and the act of measurement device classically, in a deterministic way... But treating the quantum state as a probability in a non-deterministic way. So which is i
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Also, instead of thinking of things being fundamentally composed of objects that are sort of both waves and particles I find it easier to picture them all as waves that only occasionally act as particles under the right conditions. This seems counter-intuitive since most of the world
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ooo, neat. I love wikipedia. I've not read up on the collapse theories directly but after reading what you linked to I can see this is where some of the more recent theories that propose the universe operates much like a collapsing sand dune got their start. The idea being that there is some critical point where a wave will collapse, like a sand dune having a landslide. It's impossible to know when it will collapse but as more sand builds up the chances become more and more likely.
Particularly I like the pe
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entangled with the cat (not literally, that would hurt)
I'm thinking that you are correct! [youtube.com]
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And here this post is modded +5 Informative but somewhere else it's modded +5 Funny
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And here this post is modded +5 Informative but somewhere else it's modded +5 Funny
Right? I've no idea why people think Physics is dull. There's no movie, no music, no book, or even theological work (The Bible) that proposes anything nearly as insane as what reality actually is. God would be a hell of a lot easier to explain than this stuff. lol
Sorry, but that is just incorrect (Score:2, Insightful)
. There's no such thing as a passive detector.
A larger part of quantum mechanics is there is no such thing as any interaction being passive. You're detector could consist of a photon bouncing off of a particle or the interaction between two particles. Until you make a measurement on that second particle, or it interacts with the environment, then you've created an entanglement between the detecting particle and the thing being measured. Any dependent interaction within a sealed
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He wasn't seriously suggesting that the experiment as described would actually work. It's a thought experiment, meant to give you a better grasp of the kind of weird things that happen at microscopic scales by scaling them to everyday experience.
Besides which, the idea is that the entire system - including the detector and the poison bottle - remains in an indeterminate state until observed.
There's no way it'd ever actually work as described. But that isn't, and was never, the point.
There's also no paradox.
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Paradox doesn't mean it's contrary to the way the universe works. Weird and counter-intuitive is a near synonym to paradox.
Some definitions:
a statement or proposition that, despite sound (or apparently sound) reasoning from acceptable premises, leads to a conclusion that seems senseless, logically unacceptable, or self-contradictory.
a seemingly absurd or self-contradictory statement or proposition that when investigated or explained may prove to be well founded or true.
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Except that the math there works out completely differently.
See: double-slit experiment. [wikipedia.org] If photons didn't exist in a superposition of states, then the distribution of light you'd get with the double slit would be the distribution you get from having one slit covered plus the one you'd get from covering the other one. But you don't--the distribution is completely different, which means that a single photon somehow travel though *both* slits and "interferes with itself."
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made out of quantum particles!
Everything is made out of quantum particles, so this is rather a moronic reply. That being said, I'm quite satisfied with the "entanglement" arguments made by others (the photon detector needn't decohere/collapse the waveform--it could simply entangle with it, in which case, if you really did have a box with a cat completely isolated from the outside universe, then the paradox would still hold). I probably won't be making this response in the future, or at least not without the caveat of "from a practical p
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Please excuse my absolute ignorance, but I was under the impression that classical information channel was only required to transmit one of the entangled photons. If one of the entangled photons (or what ever it is that is entangled) was transported elsewhere (truck, fiber optics, what-not) the two entangled would still maintain the same state (spin etc) and information could then be transmitted faster than light by changing the state of one and reading the state of the other.
I'm sure I just displayed my ig
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It basically boils down to this: you have to send point B the data about what you did at point A for the reading you made at point B to be interpreted in any meaningful fashion. That data travels in a classical fashion so you don't know what your reading at point B actually means until after the light carrying the data from point A has arrived. Once the data are combined, they become actual information.
Not useful for exceedind the speed of light under currently accepted theory, but very useful for cryptog
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Please excuse my absolute ignorance, but I was under the impression that classical information channel was only required to transmit one of the entangled photons. If one of the entangled photons (or what ever it is that is entangled) was transported elsewhere (truck, fiber optics, what-not) the two entangled would still maintain the same state (spin etc) and information could then be transmitted faster than light by changing the state of one and reading the state of the other.
Information cannot be transmitt
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I agreee, and don't see Relativity as reason why FTL travel cannot happen. The idea that FTL violates causality is based on an extrapolation of Relativity.
Suppose you are holding a flashlight. You accelerate. No matter how fast you go, the light from your flashlight still seems to you to move away from yourself at light speed. You can be going nearly lightspeed, let's say 1000 kph slower than light, relative to other observers, and they will see the light from your flashlight moving only a little fast
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An object could go faster than light and still not arrive before it left.
No, it can't - not in all reference frames. There will be some where it did arrive before it left.
Re: This research should receive enormous funding. (Score:2)
'Ye cannae change the laws o' physics'
Classical information is still limited by the speed of light. Quantum teleportation can not be used for traditional communications.
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Quantum teleportation can not be used for traditional communications *by itself*. It is possible to set up a situation where you combine QT with traditional transmission so that both the QT and the transmission are required to receive the data. Relativity is observed, as you don't have the data until you get the speed of light transmission. But you get QT's security, as intercepting just the tranmission won't yield anything.
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they would fight it because one of hte most popular HFT scams involves exploiting the lag time between different markets.
I think this was reported the other day (Score:4, Funny)
http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id... [smbc-comics.com]
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causality or GTFO (Score:2)
exactly...this is about **non-local** entanglement... [wikipedia.org]which is terminology that means actual "spooky action at a distance" which would be instantaneous not bound by c
otherwise it's multiplexing....really, really fancy multiplexing...something we've done since computing began
TFA is hype...good research sure...but still hype
why do we have to exaggerate when it's already awesome?
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nice oblig. (Score:2)
i missed that one!
oh, xkcd...at least some things in this world work properly
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You utter bastard.
As if I didn't have enough keeping up with XKCD, now you bring this rather funny comic to take my attention.
May the fleas of a kilocamel infest your armpits.
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And may the comments in your code always be one word too long to fit on a single line.
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I liked Terry Pratchett version more. It was about reign - when king dies, his successor becomes a king immediately. Idea of modulating the waves by torturing kings at near-death state was also mentioned.
Headline (Score:3)
"Scientists Find Method To Reliably Teleport Data"
Scientist found the internet?
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Ok, so they switched from Comcast...
I want to teleport instead of download. (Score:2)
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Well if you can get a point to point communication without the need of a middle man ISP. Yes you could end the comcast/nextflix deal. Heck Comcast itself will be gone.
Good news all around.
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That will make our internet faster and will end the Comcast/Netflix deal.
I'd be careful with wild cards. You could fill hard drives in seconds with that.
And whatever you do, do NOT teleport at work. It would be a bitch to explain to the boss why the corporate file server became instantly full of porn.
Even I can beat the old way (Score:2)
I can beat that in software.
bool getMessage() {
return rand() % 2 == 1;
}
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Why not 1000 km? (Score:3)
If it's real "quantum entanglement," that should be not different than 3m or 1km.
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How difficult is it to drop a rock? Easy. Can you please drop a rock from 50km high? After all, dropping a rock is not different if it is 1m or 50km high.
They need to entangle both sides of the communication from single place and this is quite hard longer the distance. Moving it afterwards is also quite difficult, it is not a small, robust device you can carry in your pocket.
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And... proving that you can't fool Mother Nature.. (Score:2)
Quantum data transfer will probably end up succumbing to the same kind of catch-22/gotcha that plagues realtime digital filtering of analog waveforms...
a) Analog filtering introduces phase changes due to delays. When digitally-filtering a waveform, the length of time you have to sample it to get enough to analyze and transform ends up introducing basically the same phase shift an analog filter would have caused.
b) Quantum data transfer has "1 in 100 million" odds of actually working for any particular attem
Could the soul survive? (Score:2)
I still don't think teleporting would leave the soul intact. To the observer, the result may act and behave in the same way before the teleportation took place, but I wonder if it would be the same person?
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That philisophical debate hinges around whether the essence of the object being teleported must be destroyed.
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Theres strong evidence to indicate that your mind works with and has a sizable bit of quantum state information ... your soul in effect.
Just because you don't believe in a God doesn't mean you don't have a soul, according to the modern dictionary definition anyway.
http://dictionary.reference.co... [reference.com]
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a soul i still an important concept and good area of debate if we ever develop star trek style teleportation. if you strip away all the various religious crap, your "soul" is basically whatever makes you, "you". it is what is controlling your body, thinking your thoughts. there doesn't need to be any magical spirit involved in this concept.
when you come out of a star trek style teleporter is it actually you that comes out complete with your stream of consciousness? or is it just a really detailed copy t
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If information can't be sent faster than C..... (Score:3)
Re:If information can't be sent faster than C..... (Score:4, Informative)
IANAP (I Am Not A Physicist), but as I understand it, the information is sent instantaneously (teleported), but can only be "read" via the use of a measurement taken at the source location & sent (via classical channels) to the target.
i.e.:
2 entangled particles exist. One at A and one at B
Measurement is take an A. This results in a change of state to both particles
Unfortunately, due to quantum funkiness, the state at B cannot be determined without the measurement from A.
Measurement is sent from A to B (via classical channels)
B can then determine the state of their particle (which matches the state at A)
Please excuse any butchering of the science that may of occurred due to my ignorance :-)
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Intervening obstacles would be my number 1 assumption. Also, not having to run a wire through the planet, and not having to aim a laser with 0.000000000001 arc-seconds of precision (for intrastellar).
The data does not get transmitted across distances (Score:2)
You take 2 envelopes. Write the word UP and DOWN on two separate pieces of paper, mix them up and put them in an envelope. Send them to two different locations. Open one envelope and you will have the opposite reading in the other envelope which could be miles or light years away. As far as t
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That's always what it seems like to me, too. I haven't yet heard a coherent explanation why quantum entanglement is any different from that.
(My own metaphor involved two differently-colored hamsters in an opaque tube, yours is probably better.)
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The encoding of the data was done at entanglement time.
Well, sort of, but the "data" is a quantum state. It's not UP or DOWN as written on your envelopes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Thank you for that link to an 8,000-word article which doesn't initially seem related to your comment. Can the point be addressed in a key quote or summary paragraph?
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There are things about entanglement that can't be explained by assuming that entangled particles have the contents of their "envelopes" set to definite values when they get entangled.
To be fair... (Score:2)
They only put the black electrons in the prisons.
Additional funding (Score:2)
A poor choice of words (Score:2)
Scientists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience say they've managed to reliably teleport quantum information stored in one bit of diamond to another
When you're writing an article about the transmission of information, using the word "bit" in that sense probably isn't a great idea.
eliminate subluminal classic channel (Score:2)
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nice job AC (Score:2)
AC's explanation above is the best I've read yet.
here's an xkcd that hits it, another person on this topic posted it for me: http://xkcd.com/465/ [xkcd.com]
i think the tech is cool, sure, but the hype kills it for me...it's just not quantum teleportation at all...it's a cheap knockoff...like one of those chinsese Iphone rip-off's that have virtually the same case but the software is rudimentary & essentially a flip phone with a big screen
i just don't know how we, /. readers, can fix it...is there someone on /. who
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Re:magic? (Score:5, Funny)
Like I'm 5, please.
Oh my god, where are your parents? [xkcd.com]
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The whole universe is local. It turns out all spells are actually ranged touch attacks. This will cause a massive disruption in the Unseen University at about lunch-time.
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Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
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You're wrong
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q... [wikipedia.org] - second sentence
HTH
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This looks like something out of Sci-Fi. In The Gap Cycle, there's the use of specifically harmonized crystals that can resonate across a limited distance. In one instance, that distance is 3.4 light years due to inability to make the crystals more perfect than that with current technology. It's so hard to do that they just use gap courier drones, which drop into tach and make several consecutive multi-light-year jumps over the course of a few hours to send messages thousands of light years.
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The problem with the articles is that they use a misleading term "information". The quantum information is transmitted instantaneously. However, quantum information is not the same as classical information. Classical observers at either end of the experiment cannot set the quantum information that is transmitted. Therefore the no-communication theorem is not violated. Superluminal communication of classical information (what you and I think of as data) is not possible. The best way to think of this (a