Researchers propose quantum method for messaging into past

Physicists at MIT have developed a theoretical technique inspired by the film Interstellar to send messages backwards in time using quantum entanglement. The approach mimics closed time-like curves and surprisingly improves communication through noisy channels. While actual time travel remains impossible, the idea could enhance conventional systems.

Physicists explore backwards time communication. A team led by Seth Lloyd at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has proposed a new way to send messages into the past, drawing from general relativity's closed time-like curves (CTCs). These paths allow objects to loop back through time, though creating them requires immense energy at cosmic scales. Quantum entanglement offers a workaround, where particles link states across distances, potentially signaling backwards in time, Lloyd explained. In 2010, his group mimicked a CTC with entangled photons, simulating a photon traveling nanoseconds into the past to interact with itself. The new model imagines a noisy, faulty CTC channel. Surprisingly, communication works better backwards than forward in equivalent noisy setups, as analyzed using information theory. Team member Kaiyuan Ji noted inspiration from Interstellar, where Matthew McConaughey's astronaut manipulates a watch to message his daughter. “The father remembers how the daughter decodes his future message, so he can instruct himself on what is the best way to encode the message,” Ji said. Lloyd emphasized practical benefits: “Nobody’s built an actual physical, closed time-like curve... But all channels are noisy.” He suggested turning the result into an experiment like the 2010 photon setup to study real noisy channels. Skeptics highlight limits. Andreas Winter at the University of Cologne praised insights into feedback enhancing protocols but dismissed time travel. “As far as we know, time travel or signalling back in time is not possible in our world. We don’t know of any mechanism that would make it possible,” Winter said. The work appears in Physical Review Letters.

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Realistic depiction of atoms dynamically moving before radiation-driven decay in a groundbreaking 'atomic movie' by scientists.
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Researchers create an ‘atomic movie’ showing how atoms roam before a radiation-driven decay

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Scientists at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and international collaborators say they have reconstructed a real-time “movie” of atoms moving for up to a picosecond before an electron-transfer-mediated decay (ETMD) event, showing that nuclear motion and geometry can strongly influence when the decay occurs and what it produces.

Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have developed a method to effectively reverse time in quantum systems, enabling energy harvesting for potential use in quantum batteries. The technique counteracts the effects of measurements on qubits, making systems appear to run backwards. This could turn measurements into a thermodynamic resource.

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An international team of researchers has achieved a milestone in quantum communication by teleporting the polarization state of a single photon between two separate quantum dots over a 270-meter open-air link. The experiment, conducted at Sapienza University of Rome, demonstrates the potential for quantum relays in future quantum networks. The findings were published in Nature Communications.

New calculations suggest that time crystals, once seen as a quantum oddity, might serve as building blocks for highly precise quantum clocks. Researchers analyzed systems of quantum particles and found that time crystals maintain accuracy better when measuring short time intervals compared to conventional phases. This development could offer alternatives to existing timekeeping technologies.

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Qunnect, a Brooklyn-based company, has created technology to share quantum-entangled photons for secure communication networks. The firm recently achieved entanglement swapping over 17.6 kilometers of fiber-optic cables between Brooklyn and Manhattan. This advancement supports the development of an unhackable quantum internet.

Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton developed a framework in the 1820s and 1830s that linked the paths of light rays and moving particles, an idea that later proved crucial to quantum mechanics. Born 220 years ago, Hamilton's work, including carving a formula on Dublin's Broome Bridge in 1843, built on earlier physics but revealed deeper connections only understood a century later. This insight helped shape modern theories of wave-particle duality.

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Physicists at MIT have developed a new microscope using terahertz light to directly observe hidden quantum vibrations inside a superconducting material for the first time. The device compresses terahertz light to overcome its wavelength limitations, revealing frictionless electron flows in BSCCO. This breakthrough could advance understanding of superconductivity and terahertz-based communications.

 

 

 

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