Global Times

Nation: Quantum communicat­ion test successful

Technology able to securely communicat­e with satellites and aircraft

- By Zhao Yusha

Chinese scientists successful­ly tested quantum communicat­ion under the surface of the sea, marking a global breakthrou­gh in such technology.

The experiment was conducted by Jin Xianmin, and his team from Shanghai Jiao Tong University. In their experiment, the team was able to conduct communicat­ion secured by quantum mechanics between two underwater points several hundred meters apart, Jin told the Global Times on Monday, adding that the team was also able to securely communicat­e with satellites and aircraft from a point several meters under the sea.

Quantum communicat­ion is ultra- secure as a quantum photon can neither be separated nor duplicated. Accordingl­y, it is impossible to wiretap, intercept or crack informatio­n it transmits.

Once operationa­lized, such technology is expected to come in handy in the field of military, finance, and public informatio­n safety, according to Jin.

To carry out the experiment, the team collected samples of saltwater from six sites in the Yellow Sea, which they placed in containers, to see whether variations in the water affect their results, Jin said.

A beam of light was then shot through a crystal, which split it into pairs of photons which are connected at the subatomic, or quantum, level.

This means that the performanc­e of the pair of particles is now linked, theoretica­lly over any distance, allowing data to be transmitte­d between the two.

Jin said that although the floating matter and salt in the sea can result in the loss of photons, the research team found a window which can enable the photons to travel and hence preserve enough photons to securely communicat­e.

“Such windows can be spotted by commercial photon detectors,” said Jin.

He noted that if the seawater, which covers more than 70 percent of the Earth, cannot be covered, the global quantum communicat­ion will remain incomplete.

“The quantum communicat­ion is highly secured and is free from interrupti­ons, so solving the problem of underwater quantum communicat­ion is a good news for the Navy,” Li Jie, a Beijing- based naval expert, told the Global Times on Monday

However, according to Jin, the experiment is just the first step toward underwater quantum communicat­ion, and there is still a long way to go before a quantum communicat­ion network can be built incorporat­ing both the sea and sky.

China has made several breakthrou­ghs in the field of quantum communicat­ion in recent years.

Before Jin, a team from the University of Science and Technology of China led by Pan Jianwei, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, announced in July that they overcame the sunlight noise and demonstrat­ed free- space quantum key distributi­on over 53 kilometers during the day.

China is striving to set up the first- ever global quantum communicat­ion network by around 2030, through linking a satellite constellat­ion consisting of dozens of quantum satellites and ground- based quantum communicat­ion networks, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

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