Quantum Teleportation for Control of Dynamic Systems and Autonomy
Farbod Khoshnoud, Lucas Lamata, Clarence W. de Silva, Marco B., Quadrelli

TL;DR
This paper explores the novel application of quantum teleportation techniques to control and autonomous operation of classical mechanical systems, integrating quantum phenomena into macroscopic control platforms for the first time.
Contribution
It introduces a pioneering framework for applying quantum teleportation to classical autonomous systems, bridging quantum information science and control engineering.
Findings
Quantum teleportation can be adapted for classical control systems.
Entangled photons enable state replication in autonomous platforms.
Potential for enhanced security and control in autonomous systems.
Abstract
The application of Quantum Teleportation for control of classical dynamic systems and autonomy is proposed in this paper. Quantum teleportation is an intrinsically quantum phenomenon, and was first introduced by teleporting an unknown quantum state via dual classical and Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen channels in 1993. In this paper, we consider the possibility of applying this quantum technique to autonomous mobile classical platforms for control and autonomy purposes for the first time in this research. First, a review of how Quantum Entanglement and Quantum Cryptography can be integrated into macroscopic mechanical systems for controls and autonomy applications is presented, as well as how quantum teleportation concepts may be applied to the classical domain. In quantum teleportation, an entangled pair of photons which are correlated in their polarizations are generated and sent to two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
