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March 7, 2013
Einstein railed against the possibility of spooky action at a distance because it violates relativity. Now Chinese physicists have clocked it travelling more than four orders of magnitude faster than light
One of the strangest concepts in quantum mechanics is the notion of entanglement. This is the idea that two quantum particles can be so deeply linked that they share the same existence. When that happens, a measurement on one immediately influences the other, regardless of the distance between them.
This spooky action at a distance, as Einstein called it, has puzzled and fascinated physicists since it was first discussed in the 1930s. Einstein initially used it as evidence of the failure of quantum mechanics since this instantaneous action clearly seemed to violate relativity.
Later, physicists realised there was no conflict because the spooky action cannot be used to send information faster than the speed of light. However, important questions remain about the nature of entanglement and spooky action. If the spooky action does exist, what is its speed? ask Juan Yin and pals at the University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai.
Today, they reveal the answer. They say spooky action travels at least four orders of magnitude faster than light.
Measuring the speed of spooky action is no trivial task. The method is to create a pair of entangled particle photons and separate them by a significant distance, in this case 15 km or so. The experiment involves performing a measurement on one photon and then timing how long it takes for the other photon to be influenced.
Of course, this is tricky to do with a single pair of photons because of the tiny periods of time involved and the rotation of the Earth which moves the experiment by distances that are significant over these time scales.
So the trick is to create a stream of entangled photons and to measure the spooky action continuously for 12 hours or more. If the experiment is aligned in an East-West direction, the contribution from the Earths rotation should drop out over that time.
Juan and co have perfected this technique by sending photons through the atmosphere from a fish farm near Qinghai Lake in the Tibetan Plateau. (We looked at their work last year when the same team smashed the distance record for teleporting photons using similar gear.)
They say the results are clear but do not measure the speed of spooky action directly. Instead, the results place a lower bound on how fast it must be. The answer is that it is at least four orders of magnitude faster than light, and may still turn out to be instantaneous, as quantum mechanics predicts.
If this result sounds familiar, its because a European team based at the University of Geneva in Switzerland carried out a similar experiment in 2008 getting a similar result. However, this turned out to contain a loophole which allowed the results to be explained without entanglement. All previous experiments along this direction have locality loopholes and thus can be explained without having to invoke any `spooky action at all, say Juan and co.
Now the Chinese team claim to have closed this loophole and say theirs is the first legitimate measurement of the speed of spooky action. Itll be interesting to see whether they can raise this bound in future and find out how fast they can go.
Chinese Physicists Measure Speed of "Spooky Action At a Distance" | MIT Technology Review
Posted: Mar 8th, 2013
China to Launch Quantum Experiment Satellite in 2016
China has initiated to launch a satellite for quantum information and technology experiments in 2016, a leading quantum physicist said in Beijing on Thursday.
Prof. Pan Jianwei said, "We hope to establish a quantum communication network from Beijing to Vienna."
"Such a plan is impossible without international collaborations," Pan said at a press conference on the sidelines of the annual session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, China's top political advisory body.
The field of quantum communication, the science of transmitting quantum states from one place to another, has caught global attention in recent years owing to the discovery of quantum cryptography, which is described as a way of creating "unbreakable" messages.
A member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Prof. Pan of the University of Science and Technology of China led a frontier research team to conduct a 30-40 km quantum communication test on the Great Wall in 2005.
Source: Xinhua
Read more: http://www.nanowerk.com/news2/space/newsid=29420.php#ixzz2N3KtTJZN
Einstein railed against the possibility of spooky action at a distance because it violates relativity. Now Chinese physicists have clocked it travelling more than four orders of magnitude faster than light
One of the strangest concepts in quantum mechanics is the notion of entanglement. This is the idea that two quantum particles can be so deeply linked that they share the same existence. When that happens, a measurement on one immediately influences the other, regardless of the distance between them.
This spooky action at a distance, as Einstein called it, has puzzled and fascinated physicists since it was first discussed in the 1930s. Einstein initially used it as evidence of the failure of quantum mechanics since this instantaneous action clearly seemed to violate relativity.
Later, physicists realised there was no conflict because the spooky action cannot be used to send information faster than the speed of light. However, important questions remain about the nature of entanglement and spooky action. If the spooky action does exist, what is its speed? ask Juan Yin and pals at the University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai.
Today, they reveal the answer. They say spooky action travels at least four orders of magnitude faster than light.
Measuring the speed of spooky action is no trivial task. The method is to create a pair of entangled particle photons and separate them by a significant distance, in this case 15 km or so. The experiment involves performing a measurement on one photon and then timing how long it takes for the other photon to be influenced.
Of course, this is tricky to do with a single pair of photons because of the tiny periods of time involved and the rotation of the Earth which moves the experiment by distances that are significant over these time scales.
So the trick is to create a stream of entangled photons and to measure the spooky action continuously for 12 hours or more. If the experiment is aligned in an East-West direction, the contribution from the Earths rotation should drop out over that time.
Juan and co have perfected this technique by sending photons through the atmosphere from a fish farm near Qinghai Lake in the Tibetan Plateau. (We looked at their work last year when the same team smashed the distance record for teleporting photons using similar gear.)
They say the results are clear but do not measure the speed of spooky action directly. Instead, the results place a lower bound on how fast it must be. The answer is that it is at least four orders of magnitude faster than light, and may still turn out to be instantaneous, as quantum mechanics predicts.
If this result sounds familiar, its because a European team based at the University of Geneva in Switzerland carried out a similar experiment in 2008 getting a similar result. However, this turned out to contain a loophole which allowed the results to be explained without entanglement. All previous experiments along this direction have locality loopholes and thus can be explained without having to invoke any `spooky action at all, say Juan and co.
Now the Chinese team claim to have closed this loophole and say theirs is the first legitimate measurement of the speed of spooky action. Itll be interesting to see whether they can raise this bound in future and find out how fast they can go.
Chinese Physicists Measure Speed of "Spooky Action At a Distance" | MIT Technology Review
Posted: Mar 8th, 2013
China to Launch Quantum Experiment Satellite in 2016
China has initiated to launch a satellite for quantum information and technology experiments in 2016, a leading quantum physicist said in Beijing on Thursday.
Prof. Pan Jianwei said, "We hope to establish a quantum communication network from Beijing to Vienna."
"Such a plan is impossible without international collaborations," Pan said at a press conference on the sidelines of the annual session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, China's top political advisory body.
The field of quantum communication, the science of transmitting quantum states from one place to another, has caught global attention in recent years owing to the discovery of quantum cryptography, which is described as a way of creating "unbreakable" messages.
A member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Prof. Pan of the University of Science and Technology of China led a frontier research team to conduct a 30-40 km quantum communication test on the Great Wall in 2005.
Source: Xinhua
Read more: http://www.nanowerk.com/news2/space/newsid=29420.php#ixzz2N3KtTJZN