http://phys.org/news/2013-01-mathematical-breakthrough-effective-teleportation.html
Mathematical breakthrough
sets out rules for more effective teleportation
January 16, 2013
For the last ten years, theoretical physicists have shown that the
intense connections generated between particles as established in the
quantum law of 'entanglement' may hold the key to eventual teleportation
of quantum information.
Now, for the first time, researchers have worked out how entanglement
could be 'recycled' to increase the efficiency of these connections.
Published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the result could
conceivably take us a step closer to sci-fi style teleportation in the
future, although this research is purely theoretical in nature.
The team have also devised a generalised form of teleportation, which
allows for a wide variety of potential applications in quantum physics.
Once considered impossible, in 1993 a team of scientists calculated that
teleportation could work in principle using quantum laws. Quantum
teleportation harnesses the 'entanglement' law to transmit
particle-sized bites of information across potentially vast distances in
an instant.
Read Phys.org feature story: Entanglement recycling makes teleportation
more practical
Entanglement involves a pair of quantum particles such as electrons or
protons that are intrinsically bound together, retaining synchronisation
between the two that holds whether the particles are next to each other
or on opposing sides of a galaxy. Through this connection, quantum bits
of information - qubits - can be relayed using only traditional forms
of classical communication.
Previous teleportation protocols, have fallen into one of two camps,
those that could only send scrambled information requiring correction by
the receiver, or more recently, "port-based" teleportation that doesn't
require a correction, but needed an impractical amount of entanglement –
each object sent would destroy the entangled state.
Now, physicists from Cambridge, University College London, and the
University of Gdansk have developed a protocol to provide an optimal
solution in which the entangled state is 'recycled', so that the gateway
between particles holds for the teleportation of multiple objects.
They have even devised a protocol in which multiple qubits can be
teleported simultaneously, although the entangled state degrades
proportionally to the amount of qubits sent in both cases.
"The first protocol consists of sequentially teleporting states, and the
second teleports them in a bulk," said Sergii Strelchuck from
Cambridge's Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics,
who led the research with colleagues Jonathan Oppenheim of Cambridge and
UCL and Michal Horodecki of the University of Gdansk.
"We have also found a generalised teleportation technique which we hope
will find applications in areas such as quantum computation."
Einstein famously loathed the theory of quantum entanglement, dismissing
it as "spooky action at a distance". But entanglement has since been
proven to be a very real feature of our universe, and one that has
extraordinary potential to advance all manner of scientific endeavor.
"There is a close connection between teleportation and quantum
computers, which are devices which exploit quantum mechanics to perform
computations which would not be feasible on a classical computer," said
Strelchuck.
"Building a quantum computer is one of the great challenges of modern
physics, and it is hoped that the new teleportation protocol will lead
to advances in this area."
While the Cambridge physicists' protocol is completely theoretical, last
year a team of Chinese scientists reported teleporting photons over
143km, breaking previous records, and quantum entanglement is
increasingly seen as an important area of scientific investment.
Teleportation of information carried by single atoms is feasible with
current technologies, but the teleportation of large objects - such as
Captain Kirk - remains in the realm of science fiction.
Adds Strelchuck: "Entanglement can be thought of as the fuel, which
powers teleportation. Our protocol is more fuel efficient, able to use
entanglement thriftily while eliminating the need for error correction."
More information: The paper 'Generalized teleportation and entanglement
recycling' can be viewed here: arxiv.org/abs/1209.2683
Journal reference: Physical Review Letters search and more info website
Provided by University of Cambridge search and more info website
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-01-mathematical-breakthrough-effective-teleportation.html#jCp
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-01-mathematical-breakthrough-effective-teleportation.html#jCp
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