Quantum
Internet Is One Step Closer to Reality
Research Triangle Park, N.C. - US Army research results
bring quantum internet a step closer. Such an internet could offer military
security, detection and timing, impossible with traditional network approaches.
US Army Research Center for Combat Abilities The Center
for Distributed Quantum Information, funded and managed by the Army Research
Office, saw scientists from the University of Innsbruck achieved a record of
quantum transfer of entanglement between matter and light - a distance of 50
kilometers using fiber optic cables.
Entanglement is a correlation that you can create between
quantum units, such as qubits. When two qubits are entangled and a measurement
is made on one, it will affect the measurement on the other, even if the other
qubit is physically far away.
"This [50 kilometers] is two orders of magnitude
farther than previously possible and is a practical distance to start
construction of intercity quantum networks," said Dr. Ben Lanyon,
experimental physicist at the University of Innsbruck and the main project
researcher, whose results were published in the journal Nature Quantum
Information (see link below).
Intercity quantum networks would be composed
of distant network nodes of physical qubits, which are, despite the large
physical separation, nevertheless entangled. This distribution of entanglement
is essential for establishing a quantum internet, researchers said.
The demonstration is a major step forward for achieving large
scale distributed entanglement,” said Dr. Sara Gamble, co-manager of the Army
program supporting the research. “The quality of the entanglement after
traveling through fiber is also high enough at the other end to meet some of
the requirements for some of the most difficult quantum networking
applications.
The research team started the experiment with a calcium atom trapped
in an ion trap. Using laser beams, the researchers wrote a quantum state onto
the ion and simultaneously excited it to emit a photon in which quantum
information is stored. As a result, the quantum states of the atom and the
light particle were entangled."The
photon emitted by the calcium ion has a wavelength of 854 nanometers and is
quickly absorbed by the optical fiber," said Lanyon.
Therefore, his team initially sent a light particle
through a non-linear crystal illuminated by a strong laser. The photon
wavelength has been converted to the optimal value for long distance travel -
the current standard telecommunications wavelength of 1550 nanometers.
Then the scientists sent this photon through a 50 km long
fiber line. Their measurements show that the molecules of the atom and light
were still entangled even after converting the wavelength and distance
traveled.
"Choosing the use of calcium means that these
results also provide a direct path to the implementation of a tangled atomic
clock network over a large physical distance, because calcium can be trapped
with high-quality" clock "qubit. Large-scale networks of entangled
clocks are very interesting for the army in terms of precise positioning,
navigation and timing, "said Dr. Fredrik Fatemi, an army researcher who
also manages the program.
Read More: https://scitechdaily.com/
The demonstration is a major step forward for achieving large scale distributed entanglement,” said Dr. Sara Gamble, co-manager of the Army program supporting the research. “The quality of the entanglement after traveling through fiber is also high enough at the other end to meet some of the requirements for some of the most difficult quantum networking applications.