Researchers from Saarland University (UdS) have achieved an important breakthrough in Quantum Communication by demonstrating Quantum Entanglement and Teleportation over a 14 km long fiber link, the “Saarbrücken Quantum Communication Fiber Testbed”.
Researchers from Saarland University (UdS) have achieved an important breakthrough in Quantum Communication by demonstrating Quantum Entanglement and Teleportation over a 14 km long fiber link, the “Saarbrücken Quantum Communication Fiber Testbed”.
I think what he is trying to say is its not useful for communication if you need to know that the other placed tried to communicate before measuring. So the measurement could be one that sets the state or one just reading a state set afar.
But I don’t think you do. The classic slower-than-light communication here is just to verify the results. Once this system is operational, then by measuring the remote particles, you know exactly what information was sent.
This of course assumes very good transmission fidelity (or error correction), and that the local sending side has some way to control the state their particle wavefunctions collapse into (otherwise they’re just sending random noise).
Do they? My impression is that, like the article says, “their states are random but always correlated”. I think they are in fact measuring random values on each side, it’s just that they correlate following Schroedinger’s equation.
I believe the intention is not “sending” specific data faster than light… but rather to “create Quantum Keys for secure information transmission”. The information between the quantum particles is correlated in both sides, so they can try to use this random data to generate keys on each side in a way that they can be used to create a secure encryption for communication (a “Quantum Network that will be used for secure communication and data exchange between Quantum Computers”), but the encrypted data wouldn’t travel faster than light.
Ah yeah I bet you’re right. I’m probably conflating the more serious articles I’ve read with aspirational (near-future sci-fi) material. Yes, quantum encryption should be much more practical and achievable.