Illustration of quantum teleportation
From Alice to Bob
Physicists in China claim to have teleported the quantum states of photons nearly 100 km in free space, breaking the previous record by a factor of 100. The development could pave the way for satellite-based quantum communication, or fundamental tests of quantum mechanics over long distances.
Quantum teleportation is a way of transferring a quantum state from one place to another without actually sending a particle in that state through space. In the normal arrangement, two people, Alice and Bob, each take one half of a pair of entangled particles and then go their separate ways. Whenever Alice wants to send a quantum state to Bob, she allows a third particle in that state to interact with her half of the entangled pair of particles.
Alice then sends the result of a measurement on the system to Bob using a conventional (non-quantum) means of communication. Bob uses this information to modify his half of the entangled pair such that it is in a quantum state identical to the state that Alice wanted to send. This occurs despite the fact that Alice never actually sent a particle in that state. Another bizarre outcome of the process is that although the original copy of Alice's state is destroyed by her measurement, Bob can be made to reappear nearly 100 km away.
This process was first proposed in 1993 by IBM’s Charles Bennett and works because of the strange property of entanglement. This allows two or more particles, having interacted, to remain linked in a manner not possible in classical physics – no matter what the distance separating them. Since Bennett's proposal, quantum teleportation has been performed over short distances in the lab using photons and atoms, and over kilometre distances using fibre-optic cables. In 2010 physicist Jian-Wei Pan of the University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai and colleagues went one better by teleporting photons over 16 km without any fibre optics – that is, over free space.
Inside, not outside
Pan says that demonstration had limited practical use, because the teleported photon had to be prepared "inside" the experiment. This is contrary to the operation of actual quantum networks, which process quantum bits of information, or qubits, that are unknown and come from outside. "In most of the quantum-communication schemes and in distributed quantum computation, the initial state is really unknown and from an independent qubit," says Pan.
Now, Pan's team claims to have repeated the experiment with photon qubits created outside, and extended the teleportation distance to 97 km – all the way across Qinghai Lake in western China. The experiment begins with an intermediary, "Charlie", preparing an entangled pair of photons by sending an ultraviolet laser beam through a barium crystal. Charlie sends one half of these entangled photons to a group of "Alice" researchers nearby, and the other half to a group of "Bob" researchers on the other side of the lake, via a telescope. Using an ultraviolet laser, the Alice group then creates new photons that it wants to teleport and lets them interact with the original, entangled photons by performing a so-called Bell measurement.
In the final step, the Alice group transmits the outcome of its Bell measurements to the Bob group via a conventional wireless link. Pan's team found that the Bob group could recreate the new photons from Alice's group with a fidelity of 80% – that is, the teleported photons on average retained 80% of their characteristics compared with how they were before they were teleported.
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http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2012/may/21/physicists-claim-new-quantum-teleportation-recordWhat are you worrying for? You are not getting out of this life alive, dead don't hurt, getting there might, and in some cases, damn well should!
Plus during and after the next Ice Age, all of this infrastructure around us won't matter squat!