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On Feasibility of Quantum Computation and Quantum Communication

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Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202601.0762.v1

Bell tests and Bell's theorem used to interpret the test results opened the door to quantum information processing, such as quantum computation and quantum communication. Based on the erroneous interpretation of the test results, quantum information processing contradicts a well-established mathematical fact in point-set topology. In this study, the feasibility of quantum computation and quantum communication is investigated. The findings are as follows. (a) Experimentally confirmed statistical predictions of quantum mechanics are not evidence of experimentally realized quantum information processing systems. (b) Physical carriers of quantum information do not exist in the real world. (c) Einstein's ensemble interpretation of wave-function can eliminate inexplicable weirdness in quantum physics. The findings lead to an inevitable conclusion: Without carriers representing quantum information, physical implementations of quantum information processing systems are merely an unrealizable myth.

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