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Quantum teleportation
pp. 141-146
Résumé
Quantum information differs profoundly from classical information by virtue of the properties, implications, and uses of quantum entanglement—the non-separable correlations among parts of a quantum system. John Bell's famous theorem on the incompatibility of quantum mechanics with local hidden-variable theories established that these correlations have no classical counterpart.[1] More recently, new algorithms for quantum computation and communication make clear that quantum entanglement is essential for accomplishing otherwise impossible tasks. Perhaps the most remarkable of such possibilities is class="EmphasisTypeItalic ">quantum teleportation, whereby an unknown quantum state is "disembodied" into quantum and classical components and resurrected at a remote location via quantum entanglement. [2]
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Greenberger Daniel, Zeilinger Anton (1999) Epistemological and experimental perspectives on quantum physics. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 141-146
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1454-9_10
Citation complète:
Kimble H. J., 1999, Quantum teleportation. In D. Greenberger & A. Zeilinger (eds.) Epistemological and experimental perspectives on quantum physics (141-146). Dordrecht, Springer.