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Teleportation Milestone Achieved
LiveScience.com ^ | January 23, 2009 | LiveScience Staff

Posted on 01/23/2009 3:36:44 PM PST by Free ThinkerNY

Scientists have come a bit closer to achieving the "Star Trek" feat of teleportation. No one is galaxy-hopping, or even beaming people around, but for the first time, information has been teleported between two separate atoms across a distance of a meter - about a yard.

This is a significant milestone in a field known as quantum information processing, said Christopher Monroe of the Joint Quantum Institute at the University of Maryland, who led the effort.

Teleportation is one of nature's most mysterious forms of transport: Quantum information, such as the spin of a particle or the polarization of a photon, is transferred from one place to another, without traveling through any physical medium. It has previously been achieved between photons (a unit, or quantum, of electromagnetic radiation, such as light) over very large distances, between photons and ensembles of atoms, and between two nearby atoms through the intermediary action of a third.

None of those, however, provides a feasible means of holding and managing quantum information over long distances.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...


TOPICS: Science
KEYWORDS: stringtheory
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To: SunkenCiv
thanks, for the ping.

What's the "energy needed" ... Cost / benefit?
other than that, KEWL!

21 posted on 01/23/2009 8:01:44 PM PST by skinkinthegrass (just b/c you're paranoid, doesn't mean "they" aren't out to get you.. :^)
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To: cripplecreek

My take too. No way I’m volunteering to be vaporized.

I heard an opposite opinion a long time ago challenging that position that still bothers me, and I don’t have an answer for it: Not one atom or molecule that was in our bodies ten years ago is still in it. They’ve all been recycled. So in a sense, we’re already a copy of something that existed in the past and doesn’t exist any longer.


22 posted on 01/23/2009 8:04:39 PM PST by LibWhacker
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To: Free ThinkerNY
Same subject at Slashdot.
23 posted on 01/23/2009 8:23:05 PM PST by TChad
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To: LibWhacker

Actually that’s a pretty interesting thought. It seems that the only thing that’s permanent is our consciousness.


24 posted on 01/23/2009 8:31:40 PM PST by cripplecreek (The poor bastards have us surrounded.)
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To: LibWhacker

A human being is more than matter. The atoms in a person’s body and brain may change over time, but the real you isn’t generated by your body or your brain. The real you exists outside of space and time; your brain and body are the means by which you interface with space and time. Should your body suffer enough damage, it will cease to function, but you will carry on.

And don’t be confused between what things seem to be and what they are. The physical aspects of a human being (his or her “accidents”) can and do change with time, but the person behind those accidents (his or her “substance”) cannot change, since it exists outside of time.


25 posted on 01/23/2009 9:01:23 PM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: cripplecreek
If true teleportation of people ever becomes possible it would lead to some interesting moral questions. Since no matter is actually being transferred, you would end up with a copy in a sense. The star trek transporters we think of would basically have to vaporize the original.

At least that's my take on it. More interestin stuff fer ponderin.

That pondering has already been done, in a great SF story:

The most traditionally science-fictional story in the book, "Think Like a Dinosaur", uses two props of the genre, aliens and matter transmitters, to set up the narrator's moral dilemma. Michael Burr works for the hanen, an alien race resembling dinosaurs: he guides infrequent human star-travellers through the 'migration' process. In the course of the transfer, the humans are copied, one of the copies travelling on to their stellar destination, while the other is exterminated before regaining consciousness - the hanen way of thinking (hence the story's title) allows no sentimentality over the eradication of the copy left behind. When Burr releases a traveller from a malfunctioning device, only to discover that transfer has actually been effected, he must end the life of the copy he can only view as human... In this story, the technology is not cutting edge but a device of artistic licence, which aficionados of Hard SF might deplore - a clever method of achieving an artistic end: the unflinching examination of the human psyche, and Kelly does it brilliantly.
---infinity plus review of Think Like a Dinosaur by James Patrick Kelly
26 posted on 01/24/2009 5:24:53 AM PST by samtheman
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To: MississippiMan

Was it The Prestige?


27 posted on 01/24/2009 5:50:38 AM PST by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: cripplecreek

I dumped my TV in ‘97, but to that time one of my absolute favorite shows was Quantum Leap.


28 posted on 01/24/2009 2:38:43 PM PST by RobRoy (Islam is a greater threat to the world today than Nazism was in the 1930's.)
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To: skinkinthegrass

Well, it can’t be too beneficial, they only went one mile.

/rimshot


29 posted on 01/24/2009 3:13:32 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: RobRoy

Yep, Quantum Leap kicked ass, excellent show.


30 posted on 01/24/2009 3:45:46 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist (The Libertarian and Constitution Parties should merge into one)
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To: markman46; AntiKev; wastedyears; ALOHA RONNIE; RightWhale; anymouse; Brett66; SunkenCiv; ...

31 posted on 01/24/2009 5:39:06 PM PST by KevinDavis (Thomas Jefferson: A little rebellion now and then is a good thing)
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To: Free ThinkerNY

Baby steps.


32 posted on 01/24/2009 6:48:35 PM PST by LiberConservative
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To: Free ThinkerNY

But can you duplicate the soul?


33 posted on 01/24/2009 9:31:25 PM PST by divine_moment_of_facts
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To: MississippiMan

Yes, The Prestige with Hugh Jackman. I thought it was just about competing magicians, but it turned out to be a cool sci-fi movie and the moral implications were very evident in this movie.


34 posted on 01/25/2009 6:27:12 AM PST by Brett66 (Where government advances, and it advances relentlessly , freedom is imperiled -Janice Rogers Brown)
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To: GraniteStateConservative; Brett66

Yeah, The Prestige. It came out at roughly the same time as another magician movie. The Illusionist, maybe? In any event, they both turned out to be really good movies and I bet the confusion over the two ended up hurting both.

MM


35 posted on 01/25/2009 9:05:05 AM PST by MississippiMan
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To: GraniteStateConservative; Brett66

Yeah, The Prestige. It came out at roughly the same time as another magician movie. The Illusionist, maybe? In any event, they both turned out to be really good movies and I bet the confusion over the two ended up hurting both.

MM


36 posted on 01/25/2009 9:26:22 AM PST by MississippiMan
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