There are many things that can go faster than light, most of which we don't know about yet. But one thing is for sure, quantum entanglement can be undone faster-than-light. It's just that nobody has yet figured out how to send information through that medium, and it may even be impossible. But clearly, causality isn't being violated here and it goes faster than light in a vacuum.
> But one thing is for sure, quantum entanglement can be undone faster-than-light. It's just that nobody has yet figured out how to send information through that medium, and it may even be impossible. But clearly, causality isn't being violated here and it goes faster than light in a vacuum.
In quantum entanglement, two particles can be entangled in such a way that measuring one particle instantly determines the state of the other, even if they are light-years apart. This "instantaneous" connection seems faster than light, but it cannot be used to transmit usable information in a meaningful way.
The phenomenon does not violate relativity because no classical information can travel between the particles faster than light. Entanglement is a correlation, not a means of communication and hence NOT a means of causation.