Dutch Scientists Shattered Conception Of How Information Will Travel In The Future

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By Dylan Love, Business Insider

Physicists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands were able to successfully "teleport" information over a distance of 10 feet, reports the New York Times.

There's a lot going on in that idea, so let's break it down.

The rules for the subatomic world are totally unlike the rules for our macroscopic world. A particle can be in multiple places at the same time, and can even disappear on one side of a barrier and reappear on the other side without actually traveling through it. This comes from quantum theory, and while it sounds totally nonintuitive, it's one of the most successful models physicists have for understanding our world.

Many scientists around the world today are working to develop "quantum technology," which is simply any technology that hinges upon these totally "abnormal" properties of the super-small stuff that makes up our world. The Mount Everest of quantum technology would be to build a quantum computer that could quickly solve problems that would leave our classical computers stumped. Instead of the standard bits we use in computers today — ones and zeroes — quantum bits, or "qubits," can describe a one, a zero, or any value in between.

If this all sounds crazy or hard to understand, you're in good company with a lot of smart people. Hang in there. A legitimate, functional quantum computer (it's debatable as to if one has actually been built yet) would be absolutely bursting with computational potential.

Back to our Dutch scientists — they trapped qubits in diamonds and were able to establish a measurement of the qubits' spin. This measurement is the acual information that was "teleported," by way of a process called quantum entanglement. To simplify this idea a lot, entanglement is essentially what happens when one particle copycats another, even over a distance. Change the spin of one particle, the other instantly changes its spin to match.

Einstein famously decried entanglement, calling it "spooky action at a distance." But repeated variations of this experiment only lend more credence to it as a completely valid natural phenomena that we are slowly learning to manipulate.

Forget Google Fiber. Once this stuff is perfected, a quantum internet that's built upon it could mean instantaneous transmission and receipt of data around the world or even the universe! In 1964, an Irish physicist named John Bell predicted that this could be used to transmit data across light years of distance.

While 10 feet is no light year, it's certainly a step in the right direction.
 

LL21

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2010
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mind blowing...I remember reading about this when people were discussing unbreakable encrypted messages....which is you change one side (and the other changes instantly...but with no transmission line in between to intercept to decode the message). because somehow the subatomic connection is not a 'wire' or transmission line. funky.

And now it seems they have physically done it...more to come no doubt.
 

JackD201

WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
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Wait for what they'll be able to do with dilithium crystals instead of diamonds :D Spooky how science fiction turns into science fact!

Speaking of quantum computers, has anybody seen the movie "The Machine"? It's quirky UK B-Movie with some nasty plot holes but dang that Caity Lotz is HOT!
 

BlueFox

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Nov 8, 2013
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Just one step closer to "The Singularity".
 

Joe Whip

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Feb 8, 2014
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Wayne, PA
Quantum entanglement is the way around Einstein's law that you can't travel faster than the speed of light. Effect one particle and you effect its entangled particle at the exact same moment even if it is light years away. QE is the key to subspace communication that you see on Star Trek. How can they speak each other over great distances just like talking to a friend across the room? Quantum entanglement is the answer. I have read about this stuff for years and it is very exciting. Just imagine is application for digital audio!
 

LL21

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2010
14,430
2,518
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Wait for what they'll be able to do with dilithium crystals instead of diamonds :D Spooky how science fiction turns into science fact!...

Jules Verne and submarines, Gene Roddenberry and subcutaneous injections with air guns, reading health measurements with the 'recorders', walkie talkie flip phones like the old Motorola...yeah, pretty cool!
 

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