Macroscopic Quantum Entanglement
meckardt writes: "We laugh at the science fiction of such programs as Star Trek, but it can almost be stated as a truism that what is fiction today may be science tomorrow and engineering next week. Researchers at the University of Aarhus in Denmark report in the science journal Nature that they have been able to cause particles to interact over a distance using lasers. The effect, called quantum entanglement, has been observed before, but never with such large amounts of matter. Don't expect transporters next week, but it is interesting that this report hits the streets the same day that Enterprise debuts."
I wonder how long it will take before we won't even need to go to McDonalds to pick up our food from the drive-through. We'll just teleport our cash there and get our food back, right into our microwaves, or some other instrument.
Yummy.
Now... if we can throw an atom smasher on mars we can get decent bandwidth to our next rover .
As I've understood these experiments in the past, entanglement involes splitting a particle, or taking two existing particles, and "entangling" their states -- so that, for example, if you change the spin of one electron, its partner electron's spin also changes, even at a great distance (or something to this effect).
The application to faster-than-light information transmission is obvious. But teleportation? The article doesn't give enough specifics. Can anybody shed light on this? How would this experiment lead to a teleporter??
I'm amazed that this worked with "trillions" of atoms; this kind of phenomenon is usually restricted to very small, very energetic particles. But it's NOT teleporation. Teleportation involves taking an object from point A and moving it to point Z without crossing the in-between space, C through Y. This is like taking an object from point A, running it through the world's biggest and best Fax machine, then putting the result at point Z, without crossing C through Y.
Still, it's an interesting and ground-breaking result, one that (I hope) will make it past the peer review process, which kills more scientific papers than anything else.
Why not just teleport the whole thing directly into your stomach, that way you wouldn't have to taste the rotten meat and all the crap they put in there. And I'm pretty sure will be a cashless society when teleportation arrives.
Je t'aime Stéphanie
I teleported home one night,
With Ron and Sid and Meg,
Ron stole Meg's heart away,
And I got Sidney's leg.
Consultancy: If you're not part of the solution, there's money to be made in prolonging the problem
XML causes global warming.
Quantum entanglement is basically splitting up a photon into 2 parts. These 2 parts are quantumly entangled, so when you measure one, you would get exactly the same result on the other as a result of them being entangled. The supposed ability to transport particles is not true. It is only able to allow measurements on one particle to be duplicated on the other. So, if we ever get this to work on large objects such as humans (!) you wont get teleported. There'd only be a duplicate of you on the other side. And in the act of measuring the state of all the particles of your body, you'd probably be dead too. I wouldnt care to have a duplicate of me on the other side, because you'd still be dead.
I don't see how this would allow for teleportation. As many others have already mentioned, how do you draw a link between this and the ability to transport (or even duplicate) matter?
However, I do see a possibly very significant use of this technology. If you can maintain an entangled state between macroscopic objects, wouldn't this allow a change to one object to be seen immediately in the other? If so, couldn't this be used to create computer networking devices which would work over any distance without any delay, and without any necessary wires or similar infrastructure? This sounds like it could potentially create the "ansible" predicted by Ursula K. Le Guin and Orson Scott Card.
Sounds like the matter transferance laser in Tron. Don't sit in front of it and piss off the computer.
MCP: Back again. Flynn?
Flynn: Well, well, well, if it isn't the Master Control Program.
MCP: You know I can't allow this, Flynn.
...
--
"Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
The article has such an astounding lack of detail that it makes me wonder if this is another case of Yahoo News hacked to provide a story.
:)
How did they determine that there was any quantum entanglement? Once you've got enough atoms, the average properties of both are going to be the same anyway
For that matter, what was the setup? And how come the slashdot article says the report is in 'Nature', but the link takes you to Yahoo?
Liquor
Sanity is a highly overrated commodity.
Jeez... so I have to take the bus to school again??? Bloody hell, where are my taxes going?
I heard of this before, except it was actually the concept of destroying the original and rebuilding the particles at the end-point. Wouldn't cloning take on an interesting point there?
This uses entanglement tho. Can anyone explain it in layman's terms?
One real posiblity for quantum entanglement would be in the area of quantum computing and distributed processing. The theory in a quantum computer is that every possible state of every computation can exist simultaneously. Only after you decide you want to know the answer to a specific problem will you find it - in effect any complex calculation is speeded up my magnitudes of order. In a distributed environment, quantum entanglement would allow for 2 (or more) quantum computers to join together and each work on a distributed/parallel process program and instantly share data, as well as solutions. For example, in gene research the refinement of proteins into useful medications could take place at a much faster rate because each quantum computer could "see" what the other got for evolutionary results and apply those changes along separate lines of reasoning while still being aware of what worked and what did not.
In a non-quantum computing environment, data networking could happen much faster (blowing the doors of gigabit ethernet) by being able to instantly transfer the entire contents of a hard drive from one place to the next along fiber; no longer are you sending electrons at high speed (c), but now you are transferring the entire data packet straight from one network card to the next.
-cailloux
Re: clarification here is an explanation of teleportation [posted as another part of this thread].
I just figured he opened up his "My Computer" icon, saw Drives A:, C:, D:, E:, F:, etc:, and decided that the letter B stopped existing when the single-floppy PC was introduced.
Clarification:
Quantum entanglement involves creating a system in which the state (polarization, spin, etc.) of two or more particles are 'dependent on' each other. Measuring the state of one particle defines the state of the other, 'magically', over some distance.
HOWEVER make no mistake, nothing in quantum mechanics or entanglement theory allows anything resembling faster-than-light information traveling, nor teleportation as we understand it. This is pure fantasy that many physicists subtly or not-so-subtly use to solicit grants, or at least popular press. (There's plenty of this nonsense in sci-tech magazines.) It certainly worked here.
Here's another example of macroscopic 'quantum entanglement'. I have a bag with two billiard balls, one black, one white. I close my eyes, pull one out and put it in a second bag. Then, I hand you the first bag, and walk across the room with the second bag, and open it. Once I look at the color of the billiard ball in my bag, the color of the ball in your bag 'magically' changes color and assumes a defined state. These billiard balls are entangled, very much like subatomic particles are.
Can you ever transport information faster than light using this method? NO. Can matter be teleported? NO. I really wish these pop-sci articles would put an end to these misconceptions once and for all...
This was presented at the
International Conference on Quantum Information
June 10-13, 2001 at the University of Rochester campus in Rochester, New York.
someone better get their ass in gear and invent an anti-teleportation shield pretty damned quick, otherwise terrorists will just be able to teleport bombs into buildings from anywhere.
maybe something involving large tanks of hot tea... or no tea... or both...
https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
...when I can play Quake IX with my buddy on Mars at LAN speeds.
I got my Linux laptop at System76.
Etherlessnet
But to get any transportation, you would need to put still need to transport(=move) one of those particles to the new location defeating the point of our transporter!
It either proves Star Trek jargon is real or that this report (along with most "science" on slashdot these days) is baloney)
You're not teleporting matter, you're teleporting INFORMATION about the state of the movement of the particles at point A. From what I've read the first real world application of this would be something akin to the modems and NICs of today. The main benefits of course being that the transfer happens instantaneously and since trillions of atoms can be jostled at the same time, one could send as much information as the recieving end could sort through.
I've long thought that quantum entanglements may have something to do with the impressive ability of many twins to feel what their twin is doing...shoot, it isn't that hard to believe that some of the source matter for the embyos was in an entangled state and thus incorporated into the growing fetus.
I don't have any firm views on this...just wanted to throw it out there.
Writers imply. Readers infer.
But what is an object ? :)
Is an object what it is made of ? (ie. the information of the object is the object) or is the object what it is itself ?
Does every single particle have an unknowable divine ID ?
If the object is completely described by its composition, then yeah teleportation might be possible, because it is directly related to the exchange of information.
But, for what I understand, the information exchange itself isn't specialy fast, you comunicate an experiment result by a normal mean.
The good thing is, you don't have to destroy any copy, the process involves destruction itself (of the original, and in fact, before the reconstruction).
You have a pair of entangled particles, A and B, as far away as you want them to be. you want to send a quantum state Q information from where A is, to where B is. incertainty priciple states that you cannot do this measurement without affecting the information itself, but, what you can do, is measure it against A (scrambling A and Q which is the destruction part you can't avoid). the result of this measure of Q against A can be transported anyway you like to B, and applied to it reconstructing the original Q state. it's like a XOR operation
The homepage:
http://www.dfi.aau.dk/amo/qoptics/qoptics.htm
Direct links, that looked related:
http://www.dfi.aau.dk/amo/qoptics/qa.htm
http://www.dfi.aau.dk/amo/qoptics/
http://www.dfi.aau.dk/amo/qoptics/title.html
Dude, I love NASA and the space program, but don't you think that low latency high bandwidth point to point communications to mars would kick ass majorly? Toss up a router on mars and go to town? Come on, this would kill a big obstacle!
The potentials, of course, are staggering, but I have one question. Should the ability to teleport/transport matter between two points become reality, what of that vaporous non-matter that is so imporant? Our memories, our knowledge, all that is us? How do you transport something like that? Even if it's a duplication and not a true teleportation, how do you duplicate something like that? Wouldn't we just be transporting empty shells...the skin and bones and blood...but not the soul?
In anycase I guess my commute won't be shortened anytime soon.
AOL IM? ICQ? Yahoo Chat??? Bah! I use Bitwise baby! http://www.bitwisechat.com/ My BW ID: virginia
Oh well, welcome to the "Age of Access"...
That is all.
"Since the beginning of time, man has yearned to destroy the sun"
...
-- J. Montgomery Burns
Ignoring the fact that this technology does not permit the transmission of matter, only information
If one could teleport matter, how much cadmium or other neutron absorber would one have to teleport into the sun in order to quench the nuclear reaction and make Burns' dream a reality? Or would it just not work at all?
...but was published in Nature 27 Sep 01.
As far as I'm concerned, I'd rather hear about it now, instead of back in June. Then it was just a paper presented at a conference. There's thousands of those, and I've presented a few myself.
Now, however, it's a paper that's been published in Nature. Can't say that I've ever had that distinction.
J.J.
- Nature is a peer reviewed journal, and one of the more prestigious ones to boot.
-- dragons_flightDamn, here I've been going under the misapprehension that nature is a big open place full of green things and other things that can poop on you. -- ENOENT
Sheesh! Do mod points destroy your sense of humour? This was clearly a joke! I can't give you karma, but I can give you my appreciation, which trades for karma about 3::4 on the junk bond market.
-- MarkusQ
You can not duplicate a quantum state. You can create two electrons with identical spin, but what you can not do is, taking one electron with an arbitrary spin and prepare a second electron with identical spin without altering the first one. What you can do is 'transmit' the spin from the first to the second electron. But in the process the spin of the first electron will be destroyed. To do this you need quantum entanglement between the affected electrons, maybe mediated by something (polarized photons maybe) and maybe a transmission of conventional information (the result of a mesurement process).
A spin is only an example for a very simple quantum object, a more complex object is just described by more quantum states (this is of course a huge understatement, working with more than simple assemblies of a few spins poses a lot of technical problems, and that is where the experiment made a major contribution). You can 'classically' copy an object (that is, you can put all the right atoms at the right places) but you can not copy the quantum state, you can only transfer the quantum state from the first object to the second (and maybe even transfer state 2 to object 1 in the same process), so the question is, if a 'classical' copy is sufficient to 'copy' a person, or if the quantum state makes all the difference.
"By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself." -- Bill Hicks
It may not be teleportation, but it's certainly
the ultimate key exchange. Here let me generate
a secret key at my end. Now, with my QE I twizzle
the magic at this end. Bingo ! Instantly reproduceable at the other.
Better not let the terrorists get hold of this.
Cheers,
-- jon
There is a mirror of the paper here at the arXiv.org e-Print archive. 11 pages of pdf fun can be found:
HERE
Have fun!
I find it gratifying that an earlier comment of mine about quantum entanglement was rudely put down as "impossible outside of science fiction and dilbert cartoons" is now receiving some front-page lovin'
OK, how the hell do you moderate some of these comments? Not only do you need a phd to comment, but you need one to judge the merits of said comments.
Christ, I thought reading the article itself was hard enough....
Praying for the end of your wide-awake nightmare.
Some people seem a lil confused here about the teleportation aspects of this, but the reality of it is that quantum entanglement doesn't allow the teleportation of an object to any arbitrary location... you have to first split your particles (to create the entangled state), then move one of them to another location. Changes made to one of them would have the oposite effect upon the other. The theory is along the lines of, if you use one of these particles to "observe" another particle (eg, firing them at each other), the energy changes would be mirrored by the other. As we all know, observing something destroys (or at least, changes) it. As the oposite effect happens at the other side, this could be used in combination with another paticle to recreate what you just destroyed. So you could only transfer your object to whereever you've put your reciever.
However you do run into problems... firstly, if you don't reacreate the whole object fast enough, you get problems... as you're moving parts of atoms at a time, and atoms don't really like existing half here and half there, and will tend to break up and shoot off in all directions.
Secondly, you can't read data smaller than the reader... should a particle be undergoing a quantum event (eg, quantum leap while changing frequencies), you'll lose that data.
Quantum entanglement is really not all that strange... it's just particles that exist in different locations in space at the same time, as opposed to most of what we interact with, which are particles that exist in one location in space, but many locations in time. What I'm keen to see is if anyone can create a particle in more than 2 spaces... that opens the window to transmitions being monitored... and if "teleportation" is ever sorted out... would mean duplication of complex atomic structures...
...food for thought
Even if you reduce the energy by many orders of magnitude, it is still a lot. Thus I don't think large-scale teleportation will ever be practical without tremendous advances in basic physics. However there are intriguing possibilities. An ensemble of a trillion or so particles may be small, but it's not worthless. E.g., you could deposit a small array of nanodots using atomic-force microscope lithography (at great cost), then replicate them across an entire wafer using teleportation. Or you could use it to grow a nanowire along a chosen axis: the coherence length would only need to be tens of Angstroms, and the coherence time would only need to be nanoseconds. Teleportation lithography would be low temperature, which would vastly expand the materials available to the designer (conventional semiconductor lithography materials have to survive temperatures of 500 deg. C or worse, which rules out all sorts of otherwise useful substances).
-- ;-)
Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end.
No it's bandwidth here....
Their method is still limited to the speed of light... They're using a laser to "connect" the two hunks of matter. However they're saying they can transfer the state of trilions of hunks of matter at near light speed. That's serious bandwidth with some darn fine decent latency.
G
One thing enterprise completly misses, is that once you can do "beaming" you can also as good -copy- any mass including you.
:o) and if if it gets copied too.
This different as cloning, since your duplicate would really have absolute the same structure, including same memory and same beeing. Only the ultimate old question is left if there is something like a soul
"Beaming" would function in reality like sending a fax, not like the original enterprise serier used it to save production costs (No lander spec. effects required). Yes the other side receives the image, but the original is still there. I personally do not want to be beamed that way.
--
Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
Talking about wierd things happening at the speed of light - the wierdest thing I've heard about is that if you're travelling near the speed of light and you shine a light in the direction of travel, the light would travel away from you at THE SPEED OF LIGHT! Thus the light beam is travelling at almost twice the speed of light! Can anyone confirm this?
Arrrghhh! My head!
Pinky: "What are we going to do tomorrow night Brain?"
Brain: "I would tell you Pinky but this 120 char limi
Given that one -could- teleport animate matter (e.g. Spock) using some technology derived from quantum entangling, surely it is imperative that the matter to be teleported be kept at near-zero kelvin, otherwise you are talking about a load of mush at the other end. I love the idea of telling nearly every particle to "Keep still while we transport you!"
This comment was written with the intention to opt out of advertising.
regarding teleportation. it's simple.
I'm sorry, but that's got to make you laugh.
Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
Yes, initially the particles have to travel at the speed of light to reach the destination, but once there, the travel of the collapse is instantaneous.
So let's so you have 2 communication stations, each has 1 billion particles in storage, tied to one another and sequentially numbered. By collapsing the wave of a particle on one end, they can send one bit of information to the other instantly. Again, the only drawback is that you have to initially send the particles at light speed.
To do anything like teleportation, you would need to entangle all the quantum states of all the atoms. Here they entangled 1 quantum state that was averaged over all the atoms. This is quite a bit easier; some may even call it cheating. It means that even though you have "macroscopic" entanglement, you don't have "more" entanglement than if you had simply entangled two individual particles. It is an interesting experiment nevertheless, since it shows how some degree of entanglement can be achieved over populations of particles. Even though no pair of cesium atoms in the two samples was entangled on its own, the population was entangled when you averaged their states. As far as "practical" uses of entanglement (encryption, computation) this is an incremental advance at best.
You can find the preprint at
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/0106057