10/03/2026
Very interesting
Quantum biophysicists at Stanford University's Photon Science Division, using a custom-built single-photon avalanche diode array camera with 0.1-nanosecond temporal resolution, have demonstrated that biophoton emission from human skin and tissue is not merely a metabolic byproduct but exhibits quantum coherence — photons emitted in entangled pairs with correlated polarization states that persist across 10-100 micrometer distances — and that specific coherence patterns are disrupted by cancer, inflammatory disease, and neurological conditions in ways that produce disease-specific biophoton signatures distinguishable from healthy tissue with 89% diagnostic accuracy in a 500-patient clinical study. Your body emits quantum-entangled light. Disease breaks the pattern. 📡
Quantum coherence in biological systems was considered physically implausible until evidence emerged for its role in photosynthesis, avian magnetic navigation, and enzyme catalysis. Stanford's biophoton coherence finding extends this paradigm to what may be cellular communication itself. Entangled photon pairs are produced when excited molecular species in adjacent cells simultaneously return to ground state through coupled quantum transitions — a process that requires coordination between the metabolic states of neighboring cells. The coherence patterns therefore reflect the degree of metabolic coordination across tissue — a property that is precisely what is disrupted when cells undergo malignant transformation, inflammatory reprogramming, or neurodegeneration.
The diagnostic application is uniquely powerful because it measures the quantum coordination of cellular metabolism rather than any specific molecular marker — meaning a single measurement detects any pathological disruption of tissue coherence regardless of the specific disease mechanism. It's a measure of how well the biological system is cooperating with itself. Disease, by this measure, is a loss of quantum coordination. Health is a quantum property.
Stanford's photon science division is partnering with a medical imaging startup to develop the first clinical biophoton coherence scanner. The instrument that reads the quantum language of health may be medicine's most powerful diagnostic tool yet.
Source: Stanford University Photon Science Division, Science 2025