Quantum Memory Matrix
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QMM_space_time_cells.png Planck-scale lattice of “memory cells” (schematic) | |
Fields | Quantum gravity · Quantum information science |
---|---|
Authors | Florian Neukart, Valerii Vinokur, Reuben Brasher, Eike Marx |
Year proposed | 2024 |
Related topics | Black hole information paradox · Loop quantum gravity · Quantum error correction |
Originally proposed in 2024, the Quantum Memory Matrix (QMM) is a discretized, Planck-scale framework that models space-time as a four-dimensional lattice of finite-dimensional Hilbert “memory cells.” Each cell can imprint the complete quantum state of any field that traverses it and later retrieve that information through a complementary unitary map.[1] Because information is never destroyed—only redistributed among cells—the framework offers a unitary resolution of the black-hole information paradox, a natural ultraviolet cutoff, and a platform for unifying gravity with the Standard Model via gauge-invariant imprint operators. QMM also serves as a hardware-inspired blueprint for fault-tolerant quantum memory. The framework was initially developed by physicist Florian Neukart.

Historical background
- 2024 (December). Publication of “The Quantum Memory Matrix” introduces the hypothesis and local imprint operators.[1]
- 2024 (December). An IBM Quantum experiment demonstrates reversible imprinting and retrieval.[2]
- 2025 (February). Two companion preprints extend QMM to electromagnetism[3][4] and to the strong and weak sectors.[5]
- 2025 (April). A study applies the framework to cosmological structure formation and PBH production.[6]
- 2025 (May). Advanced Quantum Technologies reports QMM-enhanced error-correction fidelities.[7]
Theoretical framework
Lattice structure
- Cells and topology. QMM discretizes space-time as a four-dimensional cubic lattice with spacing . Each site x hosts a finite Hilbert space , so the global kinematic space factorizes into . Local imprint generators commute at space-like separation, ensuring microcausality; information spreads through a nearest-neighbor Hamiltonian .
- Emergent metric. Lattice connectivity is encoded in an adjacency matrix (equal to 1 for nearest neighbors). On coarse scales the block-averaged metric is
- where is an block centered on macroscopic coordinate X and α is a normalization constant.[1]
Imprint and retrieval maps
A local field interaction is encoded by the unitary imprint
with inverse . The map is reversible, and finite d supplies an ultraviolet cutoff.
- Quantum-circuit implementation. The IBM demonstration realizes as two CNOTs; retrieval fidelity is for five-qubit cycles.[2]
- Black-hole unitarity. In Hawking evaporation the partner mode is imprinted on horizon cells and later retrieved into outgoing radiation, giving a unitary S-matrix.[1]
Gauge-field embedding
Gauge fields reside on links. A U(1) holonomy is
and the gauge-invariant imprint operator is
with the plaquette loop (U(1), SU(2)L, SU(3)c). The Kogut–Susskind expansion recovers the Yang–Mills action.[5]
Effective imprint-entropy field
Tracing out all but cell x defines
- . Coarse-graining gives a scalar field S with action
- .
For V = 0 the field mimics cold dark matter; blue-tilted fluctuations trigger PBH production for .[6]
Color confinement
Sequential imprints along a q\bar q line yield a linear potential,
- with tension , mirroring SU(3) confinement.

Quantum-error-correction analogy
The imprint map factorizes into a data qubit and two memory qubits: . After idle time τ, logical recovery
raises fidelity to , 32 % above the bare code.[7]
Information-well cosmology
The imprint-entropy stress tensor is
- .
Regions with act as “information wells,” collapsing into PBHs after horizon re-entry.[6]

Experimental verification
Five-qubit imprint–retrieval cycles achieved , and imprint-dressed repetition codes raised logical fidelity by 32 %.[7]
Potential observational signatures
- Hawking radiation – Late-time, non-thermal correlations carrying imprint information.[1]
- μ-distortions and PTA background – Spectral CMB distortions and a nanohertz gravitational-wave background from imprint-seeded PBHs.[6]
- Small CP-phase shifts – corrections to CKM/PMNS phases from imprint loops.[5]
- LISA-band gravitational waves – A predicted stochastic signal at 0.1–1 Hz from an imprint-driven phase transition.[6]
- Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays – Spectral suppression above 5 × 1019 eV due to the Planck-cell cutoff.[1]
Reception
Mainstream coverage (2024–25) includes:
- Popular Mechanics dubbed QMM “memory cells of space-time”.[8]
- New Scientist ran both a feature story[9] and a follow-up letters page on its cosmological implications.[10]
- International outlets also reported on the hypothesis:
- Géo (France) called it “la théorie qui pourrait absolument tout bouleverser.”[14]
- Courrier International featured the question “L'espace-temps est-il une mémoire ?” on its front page.[15]
- Yahoo Actualités (France) summarized the idea for a general audience.[16]
- FocusTech (Italy) wrote that it “riscrive le leggi della fisica.”[17]
- Xataka Brasil explored quantum-gravity ramifications.[18]
- Levante-EMV (Spain) reported new hints that “el espacio-tiempo estaría memorizando información.”[19]
- Mystery Planet (Argentina) said the universe might possess “su propia memoria.”[20]
See also
- Black hole information paradox
- Unified field theory
- Grand unified theory
- Loop quantum gravity
- Quantum error correction
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Neukart, F.; Brasher, R.; Marx, E. (2024). "The Quantum Memory Matrix: A Unified Framework for the Black-Hole Information Paradox". Entropy. 26 (12): 1039. doi:10.3390/e26121039.
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: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ a b "Reversible Imprinting and Retrieval of Quantum Information: Experimental Verification of the QMM Hypothesis". 2502.15766.
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ignored (help) A bot will complete this citation soon. Click here to jump the queue - ^ Neukart, F. (2025). "Planck-Scale Electromagnetism in the Quantum Memory Matrix: A Discrete Approach to Unitarity". Preprints (2025030551). doi:10.20944/preprints202503.0551.v1.
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: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ "Integrating Electromagnetic Interactions into the QMM Framework". 2. 2502.15766v2.
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ignored (help) A bot will complete this citation soon. Click here to jump the queue - ^ a b c d Neukart, F. (2025). "Extending the Quantum Memory Matrix Framework to the Strong and Weak Interactions". Entropy. 27 (2): 153. doi:10.3390/e27020153.
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: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ a b c d e f "Information Wells and the Emergence of Primordial Black Holes in a Cyclic Quantum Universe". 2506.13816.
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ignored (help) A bot will complete this citation soon. Click here to jump the queue - ^ a b c "QMM-Enhanced Error Correction: Demonstrating Reversible Imprinting and Retrieval for Robust Quantum Computation". Adv. Quantum Technol. 2025. doi:10.1002/qute.202500262.
- ^ Orf, Darren (24 April 2024). "Physicists Discover Memory Cells in Space-Time". Popular Mechanics. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "The radical idea that space-time remembers could upend cosmology". New Scientist. 31 May 2025. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "On the strange idea that space-time can remember". New Scientist. 7 June 2025. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
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:|section=
ignored (help) - ^ "Does Space-Time Remember?". ScienceReader. 18 June 2025. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ ""Space-Time Has Memory": Radical New Theory Suggests the Universe Remembers". Rude Baguette (in French). 20 June 2025. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "Welcome to the Quantum Memory Matrix Hypothesis". The Quantum Insider. 11 December 2024. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "Et si l'espace-temps était doté d'une mémoire ? La théorie qui pourrait absolument tout bouleverser". Géo. 17 Jun 2025.
- ^ "L'espace-temps est-il une mémoire ?". Courrier International. 18 Jun 2025.
- ^ "L'espace-temps a-t-il une mémoire ?". Yahoo Actualités. 19 Jun 2025.
- ^ "L'universo potrebbe avere una memoria ? La teoria che riscrive le leggi della fisica". FocusTech (in Italian). 20 Jun 2025.
- ^ "A coisa mais chocante que a física tem a oferecer é a possibilidade de um entrelaçamento quântico reescrever a gravidade". Xataka Brasil (in Portuguese). 22 Jun 2025.
- ^ "Nuevos indicios de que el espacio-tiempo estaría memorizando información". Levante-EMV / Tendencias21 (in Spanish). 23 Jun 2025.
- ^ "Nueva hipótesis científica sugiere que el universo podría tener su propia memoria". Mystery Planet (in Spanish). 24 Jun 2025.