China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Beijing-Shanghai quantum link a ‘new era’

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com. cn

China launched a 2,000-kilometer quantum fiber link connecting Beijing and Shanghai on Sept 29, allowing unhackable communicat­ion between the cities.

This is the world’s longest and most sophistica­ted quantum link, and it will serve as the backbone connecting quantum networks in four cities: Beijing, Shanghai, Jinan in Shandong province and Hefei in Anhui province, said Pan Jianwei, China’s leading quantum physicist.

During the link’s launch in Beijing, Bai Chunli, the president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, made video phone calls using the quantum link with scientists and government officials in Jinan, Hefei and Shanghai, congratula­ting them for their hard work.

Using Micius, the world’s first quantum communicat­ion satellite, which was launched by China last year, Bai also made the world’s first interconti­nental quantum video call with Anton Zelinger, the president of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna, on Friday.

Micius has been integrated into the Beijing-Shanghai link, creating the world’s first spaceto-ground integrated quantum network capable of sending messages via landlines and from space, Bai said.

Zelinger said, “This begins a new era of internatio­nal quantum communicat­ion.

“I would like to congratula­te my Chinese friends in their achievemen­ts, and I hope other countries can follow and together build a global quantum internet,” he added.

With these new developmen­ts, China can also vastly extend the distance of ultrasecur­ed quantum communicat­ion, paving the way for further practical applicatio­ns, said Pan.

During the event, two employees from the Bank of Communicat­ions completed a transactio­n from Shanghai to Beijing using the quantum link. The State Grid is also developing a managing applicatio­n using a quantum link.

In the future, Chinese scientists will improve the stability of the quantum channel, improve quantum satellites’ communicat­ion efficiency and stability during the daytime, and launch high orbit quantum satellites, said Pan.

“China will also cooperate with Germany, Russia, Italy, Singapore and other countries to explore the practicali­ty of a global quantum communicat­ion network,” he added. But for residentia­l use, “it will still take around 10 to 15 years, after the cost has been reduced”.

Quantum communicat­ion uses subatomic particles such as photons — the individual particles of light — to send data using quantum mechanics, said Nie Jiming, a quantum researcher at the CAS.

This communicat­ion is regarded as the most secure because these particles cannot be destroyed or duplicated and can detect eavesdropp­ers and alert authoritie­s, he added.

“It will have great applicatio­n in... fields where security is paramount,” he said.

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