Submitted by SimplyZer0 t3_11wrxjm in space
Nerull t1_jd1uavq wrote
Reply to comment by SimplyZer0 in The effects of Red Shift by SimplyZer0
The 2022 Nobel prize in physics did no such thing. It wasn't about information transfer at all. It also isn't new - Nobel prizes are awarded for important work, not new work. On average Nobel prizes are awarded about 15-20 years after a work is published, if that work proves to be important enough. This one did, but its not some breakthrough that we didn't understand until now - it was awarded for work in 80s and 90s that has been the status quo in quantum physics for decades - and that physics, including the physics the prize was awarded for - confirm that no information can be transferred through entanglement.
The most recent paper cited by the Nobel committee in their summary of the work the prize was awarded for was published in 1999.
SimplyZer0 OP t1_jd24gca wrote
Yes this is all correct however you missed the part of the experiment that shows quantuam teleportation
Nerull t1_jd2ckmo wrote
Quantum teleportation is the transmission of a quantum state from one location to another through a classical communication channel. What does that have to do with information transmission through entanglement?
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