Hamilton Journal News

3 physicists share Nobel Prize for work in quantum science

- Associated Press By David Keyton, Seth Borenstein and Frank Jordans

STOCKHOLM — Three scientists jointly won this year’s Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for proving that tiny particles could retain a connection with each other even when separated, a phenomenon once doubted but now being explored for potential real-world applicatio­ns such as encrypting informatio­n.

Frenchman Alain Aspect, American John F. Clauser and Austrian Anton Zeilinger were cited by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for experiment­s proving the “totally crazy” field of quantum entangleme­nts to be all too real. They demonstrat­ed that unseen particles, such as photons, can be linked, or “entangled,” with each other even when they are separated by large distances.

It all goes back to a feature of the universe that even baffled Albert Einstein and connects matter and light in a tangled, chaotic way.

Bits of informatio­n or matter that used to be next to each other even though they are now separated have a connection or relationsh­ip — something that can conceivabl­y help encrypt informatio­n or even teleport. A Chinese satellite now demonstrat­es this and potentiall­y lightning fast quantum computers, still at the small and not quite useful stage, also rely on this entangleme­nt. Others are even hoping to use it in supercondu­cting material.

“It’s so weird,” Aspect said of entangleme­nt in a telephone call with the Nobel committee. “I am accepting in my mental images something which is totally crazy.”

Yet the trio’s experiment­s showed it happen in real life.

“Why this happens I haven’t the foggiest,” Clauser told The Associated Press during a Zoom interview in which he got the call from the Swedish Academy after friends informed him of his award. “I have no understand­ing of how it works but entangleme­nt appears to be very real.”

His fellow winners also said they can’t explain the how and why behind this effect. But each did ever more intricate experiment­s that prove it just is.

Clauser, 79, was awarded his prize for a 1972 experiment, cobbled together with scavenged equipment, that helped settle a famous debate about quantum mechanics between Einstein and famed physicist Niels Bohr. Einstein described “a spooky action at a distance” that he thought would eventually be disproved.

“I was betting on Einstein,” Clauser said. “But unfortunat­ely I was wrong and Einstein was wrong and Bohr was right.”

Aspect said Einstein may have been technicall­y wrong, but deserves huge credit for raising the right question that led to experiment­s proving quantum entangleme­nt.

“Most people would assume that nature is made out of stuff distribute­d throughout space and time,” said Clauser, who while a high school student in the 1950s built a video game on a vacuum tube computer. “And that appears not to be the case.”

What the work shows is “parts of the universe — even those at great distances from each other — are connected,” said Johns Hopkins physicist N. Peter Armitage. “This is something so unintuitiv­e and something so at odds with how we feel the world ‘should’ be.”

This hard-to-understand field started with thought experiment­s. But what in one sense is philosophi­cal musings about the universe also holds hope for more secure and faster computers all based on entangled photons and matter that still interact no matter how distant.

“With my first experiment­s I was sometimes asked by the press what they were good for,” Zeilinger, 77, told reporters in Vienna. “And I said with pride: ‘It’s good for nothing. I’m doing this purely out of curiosity.’”

In quantum entangleme­nt, establishi­ng common informatio­n between two photons not near each other “allows us to do things like secret communicat­ion, in ways which weren’t possible to do before,” said David Haviland, chair of the Nobel Committee for Physics.

Quantum informatio­n “has broad and potential implicatio­ns in areas such as secure informatio­n transfer, quantum computing and sensing technology,” said Eva Olsson, a member of the Nobel committee. “Its prediction­s have opened doors to another world, and it has also shaken the very foundation­s of how we interpret measuremen­ts.”

The kind of secure communicat­ion used by China’s Micius satellite — as well as by some banks — is a “success story of quantum entangleme­nt,” said Harun Siljak of Trinity College Dublin. By using one entangled particle to create an encryption key, it ensures that only the person with the other entangled particle can decode the message and “the secret shared between these two sides is a proper secret,” Siljak said..

Chemistry is today and literature on Thursday. The Nobel Peace Prize will be announced Friday and the economics award on Monday.

The prizes carry a cash award of 10 million Swedish kronor (nearly $900,000). The money comes from a bequest left by dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel, who died in 1895.

 ?? JONAS EKSTROMER / TT NEWS AGENCY ?? Secretary General of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Hans Ellegren (center), Eva Olsson (left) and Thors Hans Hansson of the Nobel Committee for Physics announce the winners of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics: Alain Aspect (left on the screen), John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger.
JONAS EKSTROMER / TT NEWS AGENCY Secretary General of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Hans Ellegren (center), Eva Olsson (left) and Thors Hans Hansson of the Nobel Committee for Physics announce the winners of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics: Alain Aspect (left on the screen), John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger.

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