From Quantum Teleportation to Functional Replication: Degrees of Freedom, Limits, and Testable Claims
Description
This preprint clarifies a common misconception: popular “teleportation” implies transporting matter, while quantum teleportation transfers state information using shared entanglement plus classical communication and necessarily consumes the input state (consistent with the no-cloning principle).
The manuscript proposes a test-oriented framework for when it is scientifically meaningful to claim that a physical object or a human organ can be “copied.” The key distinction is between:
(1) quantum-state transfer for a small, controlled set of degrees of freedom (DOF), where fidelity can be experimentally verified; and
(2) functional replication, where an effective, testable description is reproduced to match form and/or function—without claiming to reproduce the full quantum microstate (which is infeasible due to decoherence and the explosion of DOF).
The work includes concrete verification checklists: HOM/tomography/CHSH on the quantum side and perfusion/histology/function/safety on the biofabrication side. The preprint does not claim macroscopic matter transport via quantum teleportation; it frames organ “copying” strictly as functional replication with falsifiable biomedical metrics. “This preprint is shared for scientific discussion and critique; it is not a commercial solicitation.”
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paper_functional_replication_teleportation_en_AKMcCoubrey.pdf
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