This paper investigates the theoretical implications of maintaining a human subject within a quantum teleportation chamber for an extended period (specifically, one year) while the teleportation process is either in progress or suspended. We examine three distinct scenarios: (1) temporal suspension via quantum state preservation, in which the subject’s biological processes are halted while environmental time progresses normally; (2) mid-process teleportation, where quantum state disassembly and reconstruction occur over an extended timeframe; and (3) relativistic time dilation achieved through manipulation of local spacetime geometry. Drawing from established principles in quantum mechanics, special and general relativity, and emerging research in quantum information theory, we demonstrate that each scenario presents unique physical challenges and philosophical implications regarding consciousness continuity, identity preservation, and the fundamental nature of time perception. Our analysis reveals that temporal suspension through quantum superposition would require maintaining coherence of approximately 10²⁸ atoms for extended periods—a technological feat far beyond current capabilities but not prohibited by fundamental physics. We propose a theoretical framework combining cryopreservation, quantum state mapping, and controlled decoherence that could, in principle, achieve effective temporal suspension. The paper concludes by examining the paradoxical nature of subjective versus objective time passage and the implications for future human space exploration, where effective time travel to the future—without relativistic velocities—could enable multi-generational missions within single lifetimes.
Zen Revista (Mon,) studied this question.