"Scientists have improved their ability to send quantum
information across distant computers — and have taken another step toward the
network of the future.
From Santa Barbara, Calif., to Hefei, China, scientists are
developing a new kind of computer that will make today’s machines look like
toys.
Harnessing the mysterious powers of quantum mechanics, the
technology will perform tasks in minutes that even supercomputers could not
complete in thousands of years. In the fall of 2019, Google unveiled an
experimental quantum computer showing this was possible. Two years later, a lab
in China did much the same.
But quantum computing will not reach its potential without
help from another technological breakthrough. Call it a “quantum internet” — a
computer network that can send quantum information between distant machines.
At the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, a
team of physicists has taken a significant step toward this computer network of
the future, using a technique called quantum teleportation to send data across
three physical locations. Previously, this was possible with only two.
The new experiment indicates that scientists can stretch a
quantum network across an increasingly large number of sites. “We are now
building small quantum networks in the lab,” said Ronald Hanson, the Delft
physicist who oversees the team. “But the idea is to eventually build a quantum
internet.”
Their research, unveiled this week with a paper published in
the science journal Nature, demonstrates the power of a phenomenon that Albert
Einstein once deemed impossible. Quantum teleportation — what he called “spooky
action at a distance” — can transfer information between locations without
actually moving the physical matter that holds it.
This technology could profoundly change the way data travels
from place to place. It draws on more than a century of research involving
quantum mechanics, a field of physics that governs the subatomic realm and
behaves unlike anything we experience in our everyday lives. Quantum
teleportation not only moves data between quantum computers, but it also does
so in such a way that no one can intercept it.
“This not only means that the quantum computer can solve
your problem but also that it does not know what the problem is,” said Tracy
Eleanor Northup, a researcher at the University of Innsbruck’s Institute for
Experimental Physics who is also exploring quantum teleportation. “It does not
work that way today. Google knows what you are running on its servers.”
A quantum computer taps into the strange ways some objects
behave if they are very small (like an electron or a particle of light) or very
cold (like an exotic metal cooled to nearly absolute zero, or minus 460 degrees
Fahrenheit). In these situations, a single object can behave like two separate
objects at the same time.
Traditional computers perform calculations by processing
“bits” of information, with each bit holding either a 1 or a 0. By harnessing
the strange behavior of quantum mechanics, a quantum bit, or qubit, can store a
combination of 1 and 0 — a little like how a spinning coin holds the
tantalizing possibility that it will turn up either heads or tails when it finally
falls flat on the table.
This means that two qubits can hold four values at once,
three qubits can hold eight, four can hold 16 and so on. As the number of
qubits grows, a quantum computer becomes exponentially more powerful.
Researchers believe these devices could one day speed the
creation of new medicines, power advances in artificial intelligence and
summarily crack the encryption that protects computers vital to national
security. Across the globe, governments, academic labs, start-ups and tech giants
are spending billions of dollars exploring the technology.
In 2019, Google announced that its machine had reached what
scientists call “quantum supremacy,” which meant it could perform an
experimental task that was impossible with traditional computers. But most
experts believe several more years will pass — at the very least — before a
quantum computer can actually do something useful that you cannot do with
another machine.
Part of the challenge is that a qubit breaks, or
“decoheres,” if you read information from it — it becomes an ordinary bit
capable of holding only a 0 or a 1 but not both. But by stringing many qubits
together and developing ways of guarding against decoherence, scientists hope
to build machines that are both powerful and practical.
Ultimately, ideally, these would be joined into networks
that can send information between nodes, allowing them to be used from
anywhere, much as cloud computing services from the likes of Google and Amazon
make processing power widely accessible today.
But this comes with its own problems. In part because of
decoherence, quantum information cannot simply be copied and sent across a
traditional network. Quantum teleportation provides an alternative.
Although it cannot move objects from place to place, it can
move information by taking advantage of a quantum property called
“entanglement”: A change in the state of one quantum system instantaneously
affects the state of another, distant one.
“After entanglement, you can no longer describe these states
individually,” Dr. Northup said. “Fundamentally, it is now one system.”
These entangled systems could be electrons, particles of
light or other objects. In the Netherlands, Dr. Hanson and his team used what
is called a nitrogen vacancy center — a tiny empty space in a synthetic diamond
in which electrons can be trapped.
The team built three of these quantum systems, named Alice,
Bob and Charlie, and connected them in a line with strands of optical fiber.
The scientists could then entangle these systems by sending individual photons
— particles of light — between them.
First, the researchers entangled two electrons — one
belonging to Alice, the other to Bob. In effect, the electrons were given the
same spin, and thus were joined, or entangled, in a common quantum state, each
storing the same information: a particular combination of 1 and 0.
The researchers could then transfer this quantum state to
another qubit, a carbon nucleus, inside Bob’s synthetic diamond. Doing so freed
up Bob’s electron, and researchers could then entangle it with another electron
belonging to Charlie.
By performing a specific quantum operation on both of Bob’s
qubits — the electron and the carbon nucleus — the researchers could then glue
the two entanglements together: Alice plus Bob glued to Bob plus Charlie.
The result: Alice was entangled with Charlie, which allowed
data to teleport across all three nodes.
When data travels this way, without actually traveling the
distance between the nodes, it cannot be lost. “Information can be fed into one
side of the connection and then appear on the other,” Dr. Hanson said.
The information also cannot be intercepted. A future quantum
internet, powered by quantum teleportation, could provide a new kind of
encryption that is theoretically unbreakable.
In the new experiment, the network nodes were not that far
apart — only about 60 feet. But previous experiments have shown that quantum
systems can be entangled over longer distances.
The hope is that, after several more years of research,
quantum teleportation will be viable across many miles. “We are now trying to
do this outside the lab,” Dr. Hanson said."
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