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First successfull teleportation done!

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  • Originally posted by Solver
    Kingpin, that's just sick... people somehow have the tendency to fear discoveries... rubbish... you see, humans do already easily have the ability to destroy ALL the humankind, should there be a nuclear war.
    Now we'll just have a more gruesome way of doing it.
    Teleport 1 enemy POW into another... that'll stop an advance...

    Still though, I'd never want to do such a thing... who's to say 'your' consciousness wouldn't be destroyed and re-created into a new being? And either way you'd never know, because the 'new' copy will have the exact same memory.

    What a way to go.

    Comment


    • I have just got back from holiday, and there is no way I am going to read this entire post. I have skimmed it, and I have a few comments...

      First of all, I think it is unfair to call this 'teleportation' as this implies moving something instantaneously, and that is not what is happenning here. They are using qunatum entanglement, triggering a quantum collapse to a state with the object in the final position. By triggering this collapse from far away, it looks like 'teleportation'.
      However, such a quantum collapse clearly needs a wavefunction which has spread out as far as the destination in the first place, which takes a finite time. One could consider the object as being really already at the destination before the 'teleportation' occurs.

      The main advantage then is in completely reproducing the object at the destination without having to disassemble it - record its exact state - transmit it across space - and reconstruct it at the other end (the traditional 'Star-Trek' way). It is actually the same object - quantum mechanics takes care of that for you.

      This should calm Stefu's fears, because I agree that there is no way I would stand in a 'traditional teleporter'. The question there would be: is the gathering of information good enough to reproduce 'me', or in other words 'my soul'. If you are able to record and transmit the information, multiple copies can be created, so which one is really you? (Ever read the book 'Altered Carbon'?)

      But in this case, it wouldn't be like that. Everything is 'transported' automatically and nothing can be left behind, so it would most certainly be 'you'.

      I suspect though that this technology will be useless in practical terms, until we understand the method of collapsing the wavefunction more completely. Macroscopic objects like us don't seem to exist in quantum states - somehow the macroscopic nature already collapses the wavefunction. It is not clear whether this is due to our complexity, our consciousness, or whatever. Since our very presence collapses our own wavefunction it would be impossible to set up this experiment with a complex/conscious/whatever subject. I can't see any way round this - no matter what the cause of the collapse is, it is most certainly inherent to us, precluding us from 'teleportation'.

      It doesn't even get round the speed of light barrier for interstellar distances, because the wavefunction can only spread out at the speed of light. So to set the experiment up for teleporting an object from here to Alpha Centauri (4 light years away) would take more than four years.

      It would be useful for trade purposes though. Imagine that you lived on Alpha Centauri and wanted a new toaster delivered from a company on Earth. If the company on Earth was far sighted enough, they could have set up this pseudo-teleportation thing in advance, so that they could deliver the toaster from their site on Earth to a collection site on AC should it be required there. You would have to be happy with a four year old model though. (This would still be very useful form delivery of goods on Earth, where delivery at the speed of light isn't such a problem.)

      Trip has a good point - this would also be useful for 'delivering' nuclear warheads to a target!
      Last edited by Rogan Josh; July 18, 2002, 08:59.

      Comment


      • Solver,

        The sick thing is what people have done with technology to kill other people over the centuries.

        Explosives, for example, are tremendous tools in the construction industry. And Aircraft for travel. Yet how many people have died when someone decides to take a useful tool, and kill hundreds, if not thousands, of people with it.

        Teleportation, in the hands of terrorists, madmen, rogue states or oppressive regimes is too terrifying to contemplate. It is a bad idea. Scientists spend too much time trying to discover things and not enough time considering the consequences.
        "Do all you can to go in by the narrow door! A lot of people will try to get in, but will not be able to." ~ Luke 13:24 (CEV)

        Comment


        • Work of scientists is to discover. Completely anything might be used both to harm and to develop. Are you offering that the humanking stops researching of some things?
          Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
          Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
          I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

          Comment


          • The work of scientists cannot be seperated from ethics.
            "Do all you can to go in by the narrow door! A lot of people will try to get in, but will not be able to." ~ Luke 13:24 (CEV)

            Comment


            • Are you a ludite? Your beliefs seem to tell so...
              Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
              Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
              I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

              Comment


              • LOL

                No, I'm not a Ludite. But perhaps I do have a different world-view than most people.

                By the way, I'm not really advocating killing scientists involved with teleportation. I just think we need to consider whether the possible costs will outweigh the possible benefits before we charge ahead with research.

                And there are numerous technologies I feel this way about: Stem-Cell Research, Genetically Modifying Organisms, Engineered Viruses, Nano-technology and Cloning to name a few. I think they're bad ideas that will cause more harm to human-kind than they solve. They're beneficial in the right hands, but sooner or later, they end up in the wrong hands...
                "Do all you can to go in by the narrow door! A lot of people will try to get in, but will not be able to." ~ Luke 13:24 (CEV)

                Comment


                • Anything might end up in the wrong hands, in fact.

                  I'm a believer that research must be conducted - that's what the humankind is doing currently. And I can't understand those people who are so terribly against human cloning, either.
                  Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
                  Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
                  I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

                  Comment


                  • The insurmountable fact remains that all human progress always comes at a cost. That's just how it is, and nothing will change, we must simply deal with it.

                    Comment


                    • Exactly, and if we stopped research, we would no longer be humans as we are.
                      Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
                      Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
                      I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

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                      • Kingpin... terrorists can use the internet to communicate without being monitored... Get out, now! Run away!

                        Would you rather live ten thousand years ago, before agriculture and such, or now?

                        Sorry, back on topic.

                        I like science, a lot. Sadly the most advanced science class I have taken is Physics in high school. That will change once I get into college.

                        Anyway, can someone briefly explain to me what the quantum state of an object is and what wave functions have to do with all of this? I have only a very vague understanding.
                        Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
                        "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Lorizael
                          Anyway, can someone briefly explain to me what the quantum state of an object is and what wave functions have to do with all of this? I have only a very vague understanding.
                          I will give this a go.

                          Very small objects obey quantum mechanics rather than classical mechanics. Every object has a 'wave-function' which is a little bit like a probability distribution. When a measurement or observation of the object's position (for example) is made the object is in a definite position. Then, while not being watched, rather than being in one place, the wave-function spreads out to all possible places the object could be within the given time. Making another position measurement, the wavefunction will 'collapse', making a specific choice of position, so you will observe the object in one place rather than all spread out. The probability of picking one particular position choice is proportional to the size (squared) of the wave-function at that point.

                          Now, this sounds like nonsense because if the wave-function collapses when you look at it, how can you say it was ever spread out like that. Well, the wavefunction itself behaves exactly like a light wave (in fact this is what a light wave is) so you can observe things like interference patterns.

                          The point here is that the collapse of the wavefunction is instantaneous. So, if you have a wavefunction which is spread out enough, you can affect things on the other side of the room (or universe!) by collaping the wavefunction on our side of the room.

                          How the collapse happens - why the affect of a measurement collapses the wavefunction - is unknown. The old thought experiment of schroedinger's cat was supposed to show how silly this is: would the cat be able to collapse its own wavefunction or not?

                          Hope this helps a little.

                          Comment


                          • Rogan,

                            Are they fixing the Standard Model to deal with neutrinos?
                            (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
                            (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
                            (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

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                            • You would have to be happy with a four year old model though. (This would still be very useful form delivery of goods on Earth, where delivery at the speed of light isn't such a problem.)


                              Eight years. The information has to make a two-way trip.
                              12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                              Stadtluft Macht Frei
                              Killing it is the new killing it
                              Ultima Ratio Regum

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                              • Well at least nicely it's a 4 second cycle for moon, IIRC.
                                Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
                                Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
                                I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

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