I think that “at least one attempt confirm MWI” option has ambiguity. If a ion got excited once it will not prove anything. However, if we will be able to repeat the experiment 10 times—in one setting - , we can send some measurable data, like is N prime?
I understand physicists to expect probabilistic experiments to be repeated to a high degree of statistical significance… are you imagining an implementation that incurs enough cost per bit that the experimenters can’t afford that?
I think that “at least one attempt confirm MWI” option has ambiguity. If a ion got excited once it will not prove anything. However, if we will be able to repeat the experiment 10 times—in one setting - , we can send some measurable data, like is N prime?
I understand physicists to expect probabilistic experiments to be repeated to a high degree of statistical significance… are you imagining an implementation that incurs enough cost per bit that the experimenters can’t afford that?
I retracted my comment. I got that you meant the whole experiment not just one ion.