Biological-quantum physics communication: Quantum organisms as carriers of a novel information transfer

2025-06-14


Summary

In research on quantum communication, an increasingly interdisciplinary field is emerging that combines physical concepts with biogenic carrier systems: Bio-quantum communication via so-called quantum organisms. This involves using biological systems – such as cells, proteins, or even complex organisms – to transfer information at the quantum mechanical level. Unlike photonic or superconducting quantum communication, this method relies on living carriers whose coherent states can be used for direct or indirect data processing and transmission.


1. Introduction: Quantum communication in a biological context

Conventional quantum communication uses states such as superposition and entanglement to transmit information without it being drained by classical measurement. In the field of bio-quantum communication, this principle is transferred to living structures that:

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These biological systems are referred to as quantum organisms – organisms or cell consortia that have either been synthetically created or “quantum-stabilized” through evolution.


2. Definition: What are quantum organisms?

A quantum organism is a biological system (cell, microorganism, or macroscopic bio-assembly) whose intracellular processes are quantumb coherently organized. This means:


3. Mechanisms of Bio-Quantum Communication

3.1. Microtubule Quantum Coherence

Inside cells, microtubules form a cellular skeleton that can maintain quantum coherent states for milliseconds – enough to enable quantum gating. This is comparable to logical quantum operations in superconducting qubits.

3.2. Biophoton Communication

Living organisms emit ultraviolet photons (biophotons) that can be quantum entangled under certain conditions. This creates an optical communication structure that can interact with other living systems.

3.3. Entangled DNA States

Experimental approaches show that DNA in nanofluidic channels can enter quantum-entangled configurations. This allows for a form of “genetic long-distance communication” at the quantum level – with potential applications for cell-to-cell quantum transfer.


4. Advantages Over Classical Quantum Communication

Classical Quantum Communication Bio-Quantum Communication
Requires vacuum conditions, low temperatures Functions at room temperature in a biological context
Usually uses photons or superconducting systems Utilizes living, adaptive quantum processes
Highly susceptible to interference Adaptive self-regulation and self-repair through cellular mechanisms
Pure information transfer Combined information processing and reaction

5. Applications and Implications


6. Challenges and Ethical Questions


7. Conclusion

Bio-quantum communication via quantum organisms is not just a futuristic construct – it is already on the threshold of feasibility. The use of living matter as carriers of quantum mechanical information channels opens up new horizons in medicine, technology, and communication. But with this power comes responsibility. Because:

“A quantum organism does not think – but it knows you are observing.”

 

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AUTHOR:  THOMAS JAN POSCHADEL

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