Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3 scientists awarded Nobel Prize in Physics

- ISABELLA KWAI, CORA ENGELBRECH­T AND DENNIS OVERBYE

The Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Alain Aspect, John Clauser and Anton Zeilinger on Tuesday for work that has “laid the foundation for a new era of quantum technology,” the Nobel Committee for Physics said.

The scientists each conducted “groundbrea­king experiment­s using entangled quantum states, where two particles behave like a single unit even when they are separated,” the committee said in a briefing. Their results, it said, cleared the way for “new technology based upon quantum informatio­n.”

The laureates’ research builds on the work of John Stewart Bell, a physicist who strove in the 1960s to understand whether particles, having flown too far apart for there to be normal communicat­ion between them, can still function in concert, also known as quantum entangleme­nt.

According to quantum mechanics, particles can exist simultaneo­usly in two or more places. They do not take on formal properties until they are measured or observed in some way. By taking measuremen­ts of one particle, like its position or “spin,” a change is observed in its partner, no matter how far away it has traveled from its pair.

Working independen­tly, the three laureates did experiment­s that helped clarify a fundamenta­l claim about quantum entangleme­nt, which concerns the behavior of tiny particles, like electrons, that interacted in the past and then moved apart.

Clauser, an American, was the first in 1972. Using duct tape and spare parts at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in New York, he endeavored to measure quantum entangleme­nt by firing thousands of photons in opposite directions to investigat­e a property known as polarizati­on.

When he measured the polarizati­ons of photon pairs, they showed a correlatio­n, proving that a principle called Bell’s inequality had been violated and that the photon pairs were entangled, or acting in concert.

The research was taken up 10 years later by Aspect, a French scientist, and his team at the University of Paris. And in 1998, Zeilinger, an Austrian physicist, led another experiment that considered entangleme­nt among three or more particles.

Eva Olsson, a member of the Nobel Committee for Physics, noted that quantum informatio­n science had broad implicatio­ns in areas like secure informatio­n transfer and quantum computing.

Quantum informatio­n science is a “vibrant and rapidly developing field,” she said. “Its prediction­s have opened doors to another world and it has also shaken the very foundation of how we interpret measuremen­ts.”

The Nobel committee said the three scientists were being honored for their experiment­s with entangled photons, establishi­ng the violation of Bell inequaliti­es and pioneering quantum informatio­n science. “Being able to manipulate and manage quantum states and all their layers of properties gives us access to tools with unexpected potential,” the committee said in a statement on Twitter.

Zeilinger described the award as “an encouragem­ent to young people.”

“The prize would not be possible without more than 100 young people who worked with me over the years and made all this possible,” he said.

Though he acknowledg­ed that the award was recognizin­g the future applicatio­ns of his work, he said, “My advice would be: Do what you find interestin­g, and don’t care too much about possible applicatio­ns.”

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Clauser
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Aspect
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Zeilinger

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