[Home]   [Full version]  

Quantum Communication Over Flawed Networks may be Possible

Dec 14 ,Physics


If successfully implemented, quantum communication could be an extremely secure method of transmitting information – but there are major roadblocks to pass. Recently, physicists suggested a way, at least in theory, to overcome perhaps the biggest of these problems: making quantum communication possible over “real life” networks with serious imperfections, such as leakage, and across distances greater than 10 kilometers.

All of the issues slowing the progress of quantum communication have to do with the foundation of quantum communication, a phenomenon called “quantum entanglement.” Quantum entanglement occurs when two quantum-information carriers, such as photons, are aware of each other’s existence and know each other's particular quantum state despite never having previously interacted and being physically separate. It is one peculiar effect of the strange, mysterious world of quantum physics.

Currently, photon channels, such as fiber-optic cables, are the only realistic choice for quantum communication. However, creating high-fidelity quantum entanglement between photons at two distant locations becomes exponentially more difficult as the distance between them increases, seriously impeding the real-life implementation of quantum communication. Extending the range to practical distances remains a challenge on many levels.

But, as they discuss in a recent paper in Physical Review A, physicists from Nanjing University in China propose a quantum-communications network in which producing entanglement over a long distance is conceptually possible.

The basic network they suggest is made of a sending node and receiving node coupled to a quantum channel (such as a fiber optic cable) that contains an optical circulator, a fiber-optic component that allows signals to simultaneously travel in both directions down a fiber.

Inside the sending and receiving nodes are a quantum dot (typically a very tiny cluster of atoms that behaves as a single atom in the quantum sense) in a microcavity. Each dot can be in one of three quantum states: a ground state, an excited state, and an intermediate state. Each state is a qubit, or quantum bit, the most basic piece of quantum information, like how a “0” or “1” form a bit of computer storage.

These qubits are stationary. The scheme also includes a “flying qubit,” a mobile piece of quantum information, that moves between them.

The flying qubit in this case is a pulse of light with a specific shape. The pulse acts as something like a middle man, initially being entangled with the sending qubit but swapping its entanglement with the receiving qubit, thus leaving the sending and receiving qubits entangled.

This scheme, when its parameters are properly and meticulously tweaked, avoids some of the issues that arise in other methods that have been proposed and, the scientists say, can yield fidelities that are almost perfect.

Citation: Physical Review A 76, 052302 (2007)

Copyright 2007 PhysOrg.com.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of PhysOrg.com.

Related stories:

Researchers make milestone discovery in quantum mechanics
Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have recently reached what they are calling a milestone in experimental quantum mechanics.
Viterbi Algorithm goes quantum
The Viterbi Algorithm, the elegant 41-year-old logical tool for rapidly eliminating dead end possibilities in data transmission, has a new application to go alongside its ubiquitous daily use in cell phone communications, bioinformatics, speech recognition and many other areas of information technology.
Getting many quantum states from one experimental setup
(PhysOrg.com) -- “In the traditional approach to entanglement with linear optics, one designs a new setup for each single state that you want,” Witlef Wieczorek tells PhysOrg.com. “What we’ve done is to make a single setup that allows you to observe lots of different quantum states.”
Physicists Store Images in Vapor
Books are written on solid pieces of paper for an obvious reason: the atoms in a solid don’t move around much, keeping the words and pictures in place for centuries. Trying to store letters and images in a gas medium, on the other hand, seems a little far-fetched. Atoms in a gas are constantly moving around, which would move the images around with them.
Researchers take step toward creating quantum computers using entangled photons in optical fibers
For now, full-fledged quantum computers are the stuff of science fiction — in last summer’s blockbuster movie Transformers, the bad guys use quantum computing to break into the U.S. Army's secure files in just 10 seconds flat.
Silicon chips for optical quantum technologies
A team of physicists and engineers has demonstrated exquisite control of single particles of light – photons – on a silicon chip to make a major advance towards the long sought after goal of a super-powerful quantum computer.
Classical communication problem solved using quantum entanglement
One of the problems plaguing classical communication is associated with what is known as the Byzantine agreement. In this problem, messages between three different parties are subject to faulty information. Quantum communication, though, has held the promise of solving this dilemma. But until now, it has been difficult to do so, even using entangled states.
Physicists Demonstrate Qubit-Qutrit Entanglement
For the first time, physicists have entangled a qubit with a “qutrit” – the 3D version of the 2D qubit. Qubit-qutrit entanglement could lead to advantages in quantum computing, such as increased security and more efficient quantum gates, as well as enable novel tests of quantum mechanics.

News discussion:

Physics news

[Home]   [Full version]