Quantum messages sent over 250km using existing infrastructure for the first time

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Photo by Vimal S on Unsplash
Photo by Vimal S on Unsplash

International researchers have managed to send quantum messages across a 250km telecom network in the first known report of coherent quantum communication using existing commercial telecommunication infrastructure. The quantum communications network was deployed over three telecommunications data centres in Germany (Frankfurt, Kehl and Kirchfeld), connected by commercial optical fibre, and represents a new record distance for real-world and practical quantum key distribution, according to the team.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Quantum physics: Long-distance quantum communications using telecoms infrastructure

Quantum messages sent across a 250-km telecom network in Germany represent the first known report of coherent quantum communications using existing commercial telecommunication infrastructure.

The demonstration, reported in Nature this week, suggests that quantum communications can be achieved in real-world conditions.

Quantum networks have the potential to enable secure communications, such as a quantum internet; quantum key distribution is one example of a theoretically secure communication technique.

Exploiting the coherence of light waves (their potential to interact predictably) can extend the range of quantum communications, but scalability has been limited by the need for specialised equipment, such as cryogenic coolers.

An approach that enables the distribution of quantum information through optical fibre cables, without the need for cryogenic cooling, is described by Mirko Pittaluga and colleagues.

Their system uses a coherence-based twin-field quantum key distribution, which facilitates the distribution of secure information over long distances.

The quantum communications network was deployed over three telecommunication data centres in Germany (Frankfurt, Kehl and Kirchfeld), connected by 254 km of commercial optical fibre — a new record distance for real-world and practical quantum key distribution, according to the authors.

This demonstration indicates that advanced quantum communications protocols that exploit the coherence of light can be made to work over existing telecom infrastructure.

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Organisation/s: Toshiba Europe Limited, UK
Funder: We acknowledge funding from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Japan, via the project of ICT priority technology (JPMI00316) ‘Research and Development for Construction of a Global Quantum Cryptography Network’. We acknowledge funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 857156 ‘OPENQKD’, number 101072637 ‘Quantum-Safe Internet (QSI)’. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 101100680 (GN5-1). Co-funded by the European Union.
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