ON QUANTUM TELEPORTATION
EXPERIMENTAL QUANTUM TELEPORTATION
Quantum teleportation is the transmission and reconstruction over
arbitrary distances of the state of a quantum system, an effect
first suggested by Bennett et al in 1993 (Phys. Rev. Lett.
70:1895). The achievement of the effect depends on the phenomenon
of entanglement, an essential feature of quantum mechanics.
Entanglement is unique to quantum mechanics, and involves a
relationship (a "superposition of states") between the possible
quantum states of two entities such that when the possible states
of one entity collapse to a single state as a result of suddenly
imposed boundary conditions, a similar and related collapse
occurs in the possible states of the entangled entity no matter
where or how far away the entangled entity is located. Polarizat-
ion is essentially a condition in which the properties of photons
are direction dependent, a condition that can be achieved by
passing light through appropriate media. Bouwmeester et al (6
authors, Univ. of Innsbruck, AT) now report an experimental
demonstration of quantum teleportation involving an initial
photon carrying a polarization that is transferred to one of a
pair of entangled photons, with the polarization-acquiring photon
an arbitrary distance from the initial one. The authors suggest
quantum teleportation will be a critical ingredient for quantum
computation networks.
Dik Bouwmeester <dik.bouwmeester@uibk.ac.at> (Nature 11 Dec 97)
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REPORT OF FIRST QUANTUM MECHANICAL ENTANGLEMENT OF ATOMS
... In the past, evidence of quantum mechanical entanglement has
been restricted to elementary particles such as protons,
electrons, and photons. Now E. Hagley et al, using rubidium
atoms prepared in circular Rydberg states (which means the outer
electrons of the atom have been excited to very high energy
states and are far from the nucleus in circular orbits), have
shown quantum mechanical entanglement at the level of atoms.
What is involved is that the experimental apparatus produces two
entangled atoms, one atom in a ground state and the other atom
in an excited state, physically separated so that the
entanglement is non-local, and when a measurement is made on one
atom, let us say the atom in a ground state, the other atom
instantaneously presents itself in the excited state -- the
result of the second atom wave function collapse thus determined
by the result of the first atom wave function collapse. There is
talk that before long quantum mechanical entanglement may be
demonstrated for molecules and perhaps even larger entities.
[Phys. Rev. Lett. 79:1 (1997)]
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QUANTUM PHOTON ENTANGLEMENT AT A DISTANCE
OF SEVEN MILES
Whether or not the quantum mechanical behavior of elementary
particles is called mysterious depends, more or less, on the
attitude one has. If there is a demand that the behavior of these
particles be explainable with the logistic structure of human
language, then some aspects of their behavior seem mysterious
indeed. On the other hand, if there is a willingness to admit
that the logical structure of human language may not at present
be isomorphic with the logical structure of the laws that govern
the behavior of these particles, then it is probably best to put
off notions of mysteries and take the behavior for what it is.
This week there was announced to the popular press, before
publication, the results of a twin-photon experiment in
Switzerland. Nicolas Gisin et al (University of Geneva, CH)
reported that a pair of twin photons split and sent along two
diverging paths, when arriving at terminals seven miles apart,
exhibit the phenomenon of quantum "entanglement". The gist of it
is that the detection of one of the photons effectively causes
the collapse of the spectrum of its wave-function solutions to a
single solution, and this collapse instantaneously causes the
collapse of the possible quantum states of the other photon, in
this case seven miles away. The melodramatic notion (purveyed by
the press) is that information has somehow travelled from one
photon to the other at a speed greater than the speed of light,
with the result that great canons of thought are thereby
destroyed. But perhaps the more prosaic reality is that any
attempt to describe non-classical events with language based on
classical laws and perceptions cannot succeed.
(New York Times 22 Jul 97)