I could be getting things mixed up, but I swear there was some "quantum thing" that performed teleportation.
Not like teleportation in star trek, it was more like, you have particle A and particle B, which were distinguishable I guess?, and then particle A transforms into B which becomes the only remaining particle.
It wasn't like they could turn an apple into an orange, I'm pretty sure they were entangled particles. If I remember right, it was the same documentary that showed the two labs about 7 miles apart, one on an island, performing quantum entanglement tests with each other. I can try to find it in the next few days
The idea I had in my mind, was create a device using entangled particles to record data, maybe something like weather or soil samples or as complicated as societal changes, accelerate it into the future, and since its entangled counterpart is in our time and if things are still relative through a space time warp then it might be able to make that jump.
"While it's slightly more complicated than this, making a measurement with the intention of receiving a specific result basically results in decoherence and effectively destroys the "magic" of the system.
For the same reason, it can be extrapolated that communication across time would also fail with the framework of our current knowledge."
So I had to look up decoherence. Basically if we built the perfect Shrodinger's Box and isolated it from perception, it would just fail to work?
Which is why you're saying any idea like that won't?
Quantum Entanglement Time Travel Hypothesis
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I could be getting things mixed up, but I swear there was some "quantum thing" that performed teleportation.
Not like teleportation in star trek, it was more like, you have particle A and particle B, which were distinguishable I guess?, and then particle A transforms into B which becomes the only remaining particle.
It wasn't like they could turn an apple into an orange, I'm pretty sure they were entangled particles. If I remember right, it was the same documentary that showed the two labs about 7 miles apart, one on an island, performing quantum entanglement tests with each other. I can try to find it in the next few days
The idea I had in my mind, was create a device using entangled particles to record data, maybe something like weather or soil samples or as complicated as societal changes, accelerate it into the future, and since its entangled counterpart is in our time and if things are still relative through a space time warp then it might be able to make that jump.
"While it's slightly more complicated than this, making a measurement with the intention of receiving a specific result basically results in decoherence and effectively destroys the "magic" of the system.
For the same reason, it can be extrapolated that communication across time would also fail with the framework of our current knowledge."
So I had to look up decoherence. Basically if we built the perfect Shrodinger's Box and isolated it from perception, it would just fail to work?
Which is why you're saying any idea like that won't?