Just an idea rolling around in my head...
The thing that always bugs me about the transporter is the conceit that it turns the transported object into its constituent particles, shoots it through a transporter buffer and sprays it in the general direction of the target where it reassembles said object like a fantastic lego kit, all made possible by the wonderful Heisenberg compensators. These compensate for the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, that states that at a quantum level, you can know a particle's momentum, or you can know it's position, but not both at the same time.
The idea of compensating for a natural law of the universe just seems hand washing to me.
But then I got to thinking about Heisenberg, about the duality, the uncertainty, and how it underpins quantum mechanics. We have wave particle duality, where any object, from a photon upwards is both a wave and a particle. Even that PC that you're looking at has a wavelength, it's just insignicant compared to its mass. The smaller an object gets, the more that the duality has implications.
There is also the Schrodinger thought experiment that gives weight to observer effects, the cat in the box that is both dead and alive at the same time, until the box is opened, the result observed and the quantum state coalesces.
So I started thinking that the transporter both needs to disassemble its target to get it from A to B, and to keep it intact during the transporting process to ensure its survival. Humans will die if they are reduced to their component atoms. This duality of process, intact and disintegrated sounds very much like a quantum thing.
Maybe the Heisenberg Compensators do no such thing. Maybe what they do is to establish a quantum effect on the macroscopic scale for the transporter process. Anyone or anything being beamed gets 'turned' into a singular quantum state on a macroscopic scale. And during the beaming process the object is simultaneously whole, and particulate.
They're called Heisenberg compensators as disinformation, to stop low-tech societies jumping up two rungs on the technological ladder (Prime Directive thing)
That's what I was thinking anyway.
The thing that always bugs me about the transporter is the conceit that it turns the transported object into its constituent particles, shoots it through a transporter buffer and sprays it in the general direction of the target where it reassembles said object like a fantastic lego kit, all made possible by the wonderful Heisenberg compensators. These compensate for the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, that states that at a quantum level, you can know a particle's momentum, or you can know it's position, but not both at the same time.
The idea of compensating for a natural law of the universe just seems hand washing to me.
But then I got to thinking about Heisenberg, about the duality, the uncertainty, and how it underpins quantum mechanics. We have wave particle duality, where any object, from a photon upwards is both a wave and a particle. Even that PC that you're looking at has a wavelength, it's just insignicant compared to its mass. The smaller an object gets, the more that the duality has implications.
There is also the Schrodinger thought experiment that gives weight to observer effects, the cat in the box that is both dead and alive at the same time, until the box is opened, the result observed and the quantum state coalesces.
So I started thinking that the transporter both needs to disassemble its target to get it from A to B, and to keep it intact during the transporting process to ensure its survival. Humans will die if they are reduced to their component atoms. This duality of process, intact and disintegrated sounds very much like a quantum thing.
Maybe the Heisenberg Compensators do no such thing. Maybe what they do is to establish a quantum effect on the macroscopic scale for the transporter process. Anyone or anything being beamed gets 'turned' into a singular quantum state on a macroscopic scale. And during the beaming process the object is simultaneously whole, and particulate.
They're called Heisenberg compensators as disinformation, to stop low-tech societies jumping up two rungs on the technological ladder (Prime Directive thing)
That's what I was thinking anyway.