Could it be possible to quantum entangle particles on a mass scale?
So in the world I'm building, I'm considering to give one of my characters the ability to quantum entangle specific particles on demand. Now although for many years we thought quantum entanglement was a random and uncontrollable phenomenon, it actually turns out that scientists have been able to do this through their own initiative, to a certain degree: https://www.sciencealert.com/new-production-line-method-for-quantum-entanglement-on-demand.
Sadly however, I have a tendency to misinterpret the science from these sort of articles, but I'll try my best here. So essentially what these scientists have done is somehow entangled photons with electrons in a method that can generate 40 entanglements on demand in a single second.
Of course, I'm no physicist, let alone quantum physicist, so I'm not going to pretend I can fully understand this. This, of course, is where you guys come in. So overall, my question is What kind of ability or device would my character need to do this sort of thing and what would be the limitations of this quantum entanglement?
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1 answer
Just reduce the rate at which you lose entanglement
(The paper, for anyone wanting to read it, is Humphreys et al. 2018.)
The hey problem here isn't entangling particles, per se - the problem is keeping them entangled. The authors make the point that what we're interested in isn't just the rate at which we entangle particles
The study in question produces entanglement rates of
Let's go back to quantum dots. Stockhill et al. were able to entangle qubits at a rate of
Again, though, you'd still have to deal with decoherence rates. But raising
Folks have pointed out that, compared the number of particles we interact with on macroscopic scales, you could only entangle small numbers of particles within reasonably timescales. This is true, but it overlooks the fact that you probably don't need absurdly large numbers of entangled pairs. For example, quantum computers can perform pretty powerful computations with a few thousand qubits - and even dozens of qubits would allow for excellent performance for some tasks. So I suspect this isn't really an issue at all.
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