Researchers from TU Wien and China discovered that electrons don’t just instantly connect as we once thought. Instead, they form common properties in measurable waves, triggered by intense laser bursts.
Prof. Joachim Burgdörfer put it best: particles don’t just connect—they transform in ways that are faster than our minds can even process.
This breakthrough has huge potential for revolutionizing quantum computing, encryption, and communication. The ability to pinpoint exactly when entanglement begins could unlock a new era in technology—one we’re barely able to grasp.
🚨 QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT SPEED MEASURED — TOO FAST FOR THE HUMAN MIND
Physicists have clocked the birth of quantum entanglement at an unimaginable 232 attoseconds — that’s a billionth of a billionth of a second.
Researchers from TU Wien and China found that electrons become… https://t.co/dFqbSrXYmv pic.twitter.com/K86TZFQhK0
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) March 25, 2025