The Free Press Journal

China’s quantum satellite sends unbreakabl­e signals

- K J M VARMA

China has sent an unbreakabl­e code from its satellite to the Earth, laying the foundation for building a hack-proof global quantum communicat­ion network, official media said on Thursday.

The achievemen­t based on experiment­s conducted with the world’s first quantum satellite, Quantum Experiment­s at Space Scale (QUESS), was published in the authoritat­ive academic journal Nature.

The Nature reviewers commented that the experiment was an impressive achievemen­t, and constitute­d a milestone in the field, state-run Xinhua news agency reported. Nicknamed “Micius,” after a 5th Century BC Chinese philosophe­r and scientist who has been credited as the first person ever to conduct optical experiment­s, the 600-kilogram- plus satellite was sent into a sun-synchronou­s orbit at an altitude of 500 kilometers on August 16, 2016.

Pan Jianwei, lead scientist of QUESS and an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), said the satellite sent quantum keys to ground stations in Xinglong, in north China’s Hebei Province, and Nanshan, near Urumqi, capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The communicat­ion distance between the satellite and the ground station varies from 645 kilometers to 1,200 kilometers, and the quantum key transmissi­on rate from satellite to ground is up to 20 orders of magnitude more efficient than that expected using an optical fiber of the same length, said Pan.

When the satellite flies over China, it provides an experiment window of about 10 minutes. During that time, the 300 kbit secure key can be generated and sent by the satellite, according to Pan.

“That, for instance, can meet the demand of making an absolute safe phone call or transmitti­ng a large amount of bank data,” Pan said. “Satellite-based quantum key distributi­on can be linked to metropolit­an quantum networks where fibers are sufficient and convenient to connect numerous users within a city over 100 km. We can thus envision a space-ground integrated quantum network, enabling quantum cryptograp­hymost likely the first commercial applicatio­n of quantum informatio­n- useful at a global scale,” Pan said.

The establishm­ent of a reliable and efficient space-toground link for faithful quantum state transmissi­on paves the way to global-scale quantum networks, he added.

 ??  ?? China launched world's first quantum satellite
China launched world's first quantum satellite

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