Scientists have created an "exceptionally bright" light source that can generate quantum-entangled photons (particles of light) which could be used to securely transmit data in a future high-speed quantum communications network.
A future quantum internet could transmit information using pairs of entangled photons — meaning the particles share information over time and space regardless of distance. Based on the weird laws of quantum mechanics, information encoded into these entangled photons can be transferred at high speeds while their "quantum coherence" — a state in which the particles are entangled — ensures the data cannot be intercepted.
But one of the key challenges in building a quantum internet has been that the strength of these photons can fade the further they travel; the light sources have not been bright enough. To build a successful quantum internet that can send data over vast distances, photons must be strong enough to prevent "decoherence" — where entanglement is lost and the information they contain disappears.
In research published 24 July in the journal eLight, scientists from Europe, Asia and South America created a new type of quantum signal source using existing technologies that achieves extremely high brightness.
To read more, click here.