Teleportation – Beam me up , er - Scotty

Sunday, October 26, 2008 3:05
Posted in category Transport

“To boldly go where no man has gone before”, sounds like a good motto for tomorrowtechtoday.com. Unfortunately it’s already been taken, however it’s not the only cliché we can borrow from Star Trek for today’s article. Beam me up Scotty pretty much sums up today’s efforts.

Unlike our intrepid Chief Engineer Scotty from the iconic Star Trek TV series, teleportation today is a long way from beaming Captain Kirk and crew down to any nearby planet. Science has however been able to teleport much smaller commuters a shorter distance of around (I’ll say it quickly) one meter. Well it’s a start.

Way back in 1998 a team from the Californian Institute of Technology successfully teleported a photon 3.28 feet over a coaxial cable and recreated the photon on the other side. This may not sound a huge deal but it proved teleportation was possible.

The most recent teleportation experiment took place in Denmark on the 4 October 2006. Dr. Eugene Polzik and his team from at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen teleported information stored in a laser beam into a cloud of atoms. This is a great step forward, for the first time teleportation between two different objects (light and matter) had been successful.

Unfortunately we are years away from being able to teleport to the ISS (International Space Station). Some say the laws of physics make it impossible.

To be able to successfully teleport a human being, the first thing we would have to do is scan each individual atom in the traveller’s body, (that’s each individual person who wants to be teleported) about a trillion trillion atoms.  The data containing the information about these atoms would be beamed to the location you desire, where the traveller would be reconstructed atom by atom and presto! You have arrived.

Herein lies the problem, only the data containing the information about the traveller’s atoms is transmitted, not the traveller. Their body is destroyed in the process and a copy reconstructed at the other end. Ouch! I hear you say. What happens to consciousness, the non tangible, non matter part that makes us who we are?  What happens to our memories? Is it the same person who is reconstructed or just a physical copy of their physical bodies? The cost of travelling down the wire or wireless of this biological fax machine may be the death of the original traveller, their ideas, their dreams, emotions and memories.  They may be reconstructed as mere copy of themselves. A reflection of what they once were. Like looking at a old home video, you can recognise them but they’re not the real person.

Let’s hope that science will overcome these possible problems. Let’s face it, teleporting to the office is a lot better than catching the bus.

 

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One Response to “Teleportation – Beam me up , er - Scotty”

  1. Ernie Shields says:

    October 27th, 2008 at 1:15 pm

    Fascinating post dude. I love the idea of human teleportation but remember the pig creature in Galaxy Quest? When it was beamed up, Yeeesh, lets just say it was’nt a pretty sight. The horrible beast exploded, still I felt a twinge of pity for it. I wonder who’s going to be the first human to try out teleportation technology when it arrives? It’ll probably be a brave brainy scientist type, I just can’t picture them asking the ordinary guy or trekkie. Can you? Hell no, look what happened to the pig monster.

    So heres a blast into the past to Teleportation events which date back in time to the year 1593, on October the 24th. The phenonomen itself fascinated earthers of the period. It was Charles Fort who coined the phrase “teleportation.”
    So what actually happened on that fateful October day in 1593?

    http://startrekspace.blogspot.com/2006/10/teleportation-records-dating-to-1593.html

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