In essence,
quantum entanglement occurs when particles such as photons or electrons
interact physically and then become separated but remain intimately
connected, even if they are thousands of kilometres apart. It defies our
common sense instincts and experience of the physical world, but one
particle located in Tokyo, if measured by an observer, would exhibit the
exact qualities of its entangled counterpart in Brussels.
A pair of quantum systems using photons in an entangled state can be
used as a quantum information channel to perform computational,
communication and cryptographic tasks that are impossible for classical
systems. And, crucially for communications purposes, because the photon
pairs are intrinsically linked, they provide complete security and
fidelity - as when one photon is measured it reveals with absolute
certainty what the other photon would reveal if measured. In addition,
if the signal were intercepted by a third party it would immediately be
detected, as the entanglement would have to be broken in order to
intercept the message. Once the entanglement is broken, it cannot be
restored. These properties open up a whole new world of applications.
'Applications of quantum technologies are still in their infancy.
Hence, it is likely that we are not yet aware of most future
applications,' notes Professor Nicolas Gisin of the Group of Applied
Physics at the University of Geneva in Switzerland. 'These future
applications of quantum technology would probably look like magic to
people who are around today.'
Quantum computing could allow us to solve a query - in code-breaking
for example - by looking at all possible input combinations at the same
time. Whereas current computers could take years to investigate every
possible input combination, in the quantum computer they are all tested
at once. And quantum entanglement might permit instantaneous
communication, or even allow us to teleport solid objects from one place
to another.
Prof. Gisin and a team of researchers from four European countries -
France, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland - have taken an important step
forward in making that magic happen. Their work is expected to
contribute to the development of commercial applications for quantum
communications technology within the next 10 years.
Working on the 'Quantum repeaters for long distance fibre-based
quantum communication' (QUREP) project, with the support of EUR 1.9
million in funding from the European Commission, the consortium has made
important steps towards a quantum repeater that can boost quantum
signals across greater distances, bringing long-distance quantum
communication closer to reality.
Quantum communication has already been proven possible over short
distances, but the means to separate entangled photons by greater
distances reliably had been lacking until now. The QUREP researchers
have made important strides toward solving the problem by developing key
components of a quantum repeater. The quantum repeater is similar to
the repeaters used in standard communications today and its role is to
boost an incoming signal and repeat it on the other side, so the signal
does not lose its strength as it travels.
'Quantum repeaters are the elementary building blocks of
long-distance quantum communications. They require the ability to
distribute entanglement over tens of kilometres, quantum memories and
entanglement swapping by joint measurements on two photons. We
concentrated on quantum memories, which represent the biggest
challenge,' Prof. Gisin explains. 'Results are very encouraging, though
it is clear that a lot remains to be done to bring this technology to a
level suitable for industrialisation.'
The team developed solid-state quantum memories from rare-earth ion
doped crystals, which absorb a photon on the input side of the signal
and emit a new photon with identical entanglement properties on the
other side.
'The bandwidth of quantum memories is a great challenge,' Prof.
Gisin notes. 'Our quantum memories have a bandwidth relatively large
compared to alternative approaches. Nevertheless, they are limited to
some hundreds of megahertz (MHz). Hence, developing sources of entangled
photons with compatible bandwidths and high stability was one of our
challenges. Overcoming it, we could demonstrate entanglement between two
of our quantum memories.'
In tests, the team was able to send a signal photon to the crystal
to be stored, while the other photon, known as the idler, was kept
behind. The signal photon could then be detected at a laboratory 50
metres away from the Group of Applied Physics, which when measured,
revealed with absolute certainty the outcome of the measurement of the
idler photon.
'Using large ensembles of ions greatly simplifies the coupling
between the photons and the memory, both for storing and retrieval. And
we work at about 3 kelvin, a temperature rather easily reached and
compatible with the best superconducting single-photon detectors,' Prof.
Gisin says. 'There are not too many projects that can bring together
all of the technologies and know-how necessary to demonstrate quantum
repeaters and that is something that QUREP certainly achieved.'
However, for the technology to move out of the lab and into
real-world applications, several key challenges still need to be
overcome.
'Challenges that remain are longer memory times (up to one second),
higher efficiencies (up to 80 %) and still more efficient signal
sources. Even then, there will still be a great engineering challenge to
have everything working together,' Prof. Gisin acknowledges.
Members of the consortium, which includes leading research
institutes and companies, plan to continue their research into quantum
repeaters and may look at commercial spin-offs from their work further
down the line.
For commercial applications to materialise, the QUREP coordinator
foresees the need for a feasibility demonstration of a quantum repeater
for direct communication, as well as a fine analysis of simplifications,
industrialisation and lower development and manufacturing costs.
'I believe this is all feasible, but still requires quite some time
for physicists,' he says. 'The gap between academic research and
industry is huge. I believe we made great step towards bridging this
gap, though a second step of similar amplitude is still needed before an
engineering project could develop a product. In the first step, the one
conducted during QUREP, we have identified precisely the challenges
that remain to be overcome and identified promising paths to overcome
them.'
QUREP received research funding under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Link to project on CORDIS:
- FP7 on CORDIS
- QUREP project factsheet on CORDIS
Link to project's website:
- 'Quantum repeaters for long distance fibre-based quantum communication' project website
Other links:
- European Commission's Digital Agenda website