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DonaldFauntelroyDuck t1_j5ph0zq wrote

I do understand this a bit different and would expect that this would be actually possible. According to the relativity theory the point is that the "spooky entaglement" happens at identical times everywhere.

Maybe this paper is better:

https://jqi.umd.edu/news/first-teleportation-between-distant-atoms

or this

https://www.engadget.com/fermilab-quantum-teleportation-report-221002594.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kdWNrZHVja2dvLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAHDBA8t0ynTc7F_k2JnVOXRUIpUzqyyj6BpK9DaTzOdvmk8vuKSctX_ht_-IcN0TKwrrHOjDoS1-qEqAX-KVang2lQi9Sj0c0p3VyhlgiwMLK434JEf0guL7cBMpnQhja0vtR8N0LNGXNXnsvFjOJcNPnY2mAltkGs5yJGxlGIqn

"teleportation" is in my understanding "timeless" as it happens between entagled entities.

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Adeldor t1_j5pkthe wrote

While the teleportation is instantaneous, I don't think there's any way to bypass the need for ancilla to be transported "classically," which are required for the Bell measurements at the receiver.

And there's still the causality problem (manifest here as "information causality" - PDF). Of course, one should never say never, but it seems there's always a fundamental roadblock when it comes to FTL, regardless of the path taken.

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DonaldFauntelroyDuck t1_j5q1p39 wrote

I prefer hope and dreams that if you get a little foot in the door of physics you may bust it open some day. No argument from me that there is a long way to go and propably regulariy in the wrong direction. I am however also sure that we have enough glimpses seen that einstein is not the last of it.

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