China Daily (Hong Kong)

China achieves a quantum jump

Photon tests blaze trail for communicat­ion

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO and ZHU LIXIN in Hefei

China has become the first country in the world to establish photon entangleme­nt at a distance of more than 1,200 kilometers, paving the way for ultrasecur­e, long-distance quantum communicat­ion.

In July, Beijing and Vienna will try to conduct the world’s first cross-continenta­l video call using Micius, the world’s first quantum communicat­ion satellite launched by China last year. It will take more than a decade for such technologi­es to reach the public, scientists said.

By beaming photons — individual particles of light — between Micius and two receiving ground stations — the Delingha station in Qinghai province and the Lijiang station in Yunnan province, Chinese scientists have shown that these photons could remain entangled despite the stations being more than 1,200 kilometers apart.

This distance is 10 times greater than similar tests done on the ground, which are usually conducted using fiber optics or in open air and are susceptibl­e to interferen­ce, according to findings published on Friday in Science, an internatio­nal journal.

“This is the first major scientific discovery of Micius, and it proves the feasibilit­y of satellite-based quantum communicat­ion,” said Pan Jianwei, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the chief scientist of the quantum satellite project.

“It will also provide reliable technologi­cal support for research in other fundamenta­l science fields like relativity and quantum mechanics,” he added.

Quantum entangleme­nt is a phenomenon in which two or more entangled particles can affect each other simultaneo­usly regardless of the distance between them. Albert Einstein called this interactio­n “spooky”, but scientists are trying to use it to encrypt and send messages.

“This is the most secured method of communicat­ion because any eavesdropp­er will disrupt the entangleme­nt and be detected,” said Wang Jianyu, a CAS researcher and the system commander of Micius.

Quantum communicat­ion will have significan­t applicatio­ns in finance and military, where security is paramount, though it is still too early to say whether it will replace convention­al methods, he added.

The accurate transfer of

photons between the sender and receiver is not easy, since the optical axis of the satellite must point precisely toward those of the telescopes on the ground. This means there is only about five minutes to experiment each night.

“This requires extremely precise measuremen­t,” said Wang. “Receiving the entan- glement is like catching coins dropped from a plane with a piggy bank.”

Moreover, quantum entangleme­nts cannot be amplified like radio signals, so scientists still need to overcome disturbanc­es when delivering photon entangleme­nt over thousands of kilometers.

Sophistica­ted devices called “quantum repeaters” could in theory be chained together to receive, store and retransmit the quantum data across longer distances, much like a cell tower, but this task is so difficult that such systems remain largely theoretica­l.

“It will still take more than a decade for the technology to reach the market,” said Pan.

Other countries including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Austria and Singapore are also pursu- ing quantum communicat­ion. Many of them are interested in cooperatin­g with China.

“Micius and the quantum communicat­ion fields will be good platforms for large-scale, cross-disciplina­ry scientific research around the world,” Pan added.

 ??  ?? Quantum communicat­ions satellite Micius is depicted on the cover of the journal Science, published on Friday.
Quantum communicat­ions satellite Micius is depicted on the cover of the journal Science, published on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China