Teleportation
Teleportation | |
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General Information | |
Organizational Information |
Teleportation refers to the transfer of matter or energy from one point to the other without traversing the physical space between them, often instantaneously. First pioneered by Tritonian scientists in the aftermath of the Fifth World War, early experiments were able to translocate small entities, albeit inefficiently. Transportation of matter and information through teleportation is extremely energy-intensive leaving little in the way of cost efficiency. Despite its apparent practical purposes, it is not an efficient form of travel, although research and development in the field is still active.
There are three types of teleportation: full matter reconstruction, metaphysical reconstruction, and dimensional relay. Full matter reconstruction involves scanning matter and reconstructing a copy of the scan, and this is exclusively used for inanimate objects. Metaphysical reconstruction allows the transfer of consciousness, but is highly dangerous. Dimensional relay is the newest, safest method that involves the manipulation of energy into wormholes that traverse between two points through a medium.