2 hours ago · Science · 0 comments

I had a new piece in Quanta Magazine last week, about a hypothetical trick in theories beyond quantum mechanics called jamming. Sometimes, I get science news stories from contacts. Sometimes I see an academic post something cool on X or Bluesky. But when the stories aren’t coming easy, I open up arXiv.org, click on “new”, and start browsing. And occasionally, I spot something cool. That happened with jamming. I saw the concept mentioned in an abstract, the idea that someone could “jam” quantum entanglement from afar, like you would jam a radio signal. I hadn’t heard of it before. I wanted to know more. And after I talked to Quanta’s editors, they wanted to know more too. Jamming is not possible under the rules of quantum mechanics we know. Instead, it’s something that could be possible in a kind of super-quantum mechanics, a theory even weirder than the famously weird theory we use today. In my piece for Quanta, I talked about where the idea of jamming comes from, and why it’s…

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