Quantum information technology

Enigma variations

A device that counts photons will secure optical data networks from prying eyes

See article

Readers' comments

Reader comments on this article are listed below. The 15-day commenting period for this article has expired and comments are no longer being accepted. Review our comments policy.
1-6 of 6
unholy wrote:
Jul 10th 2008 1:21 GMT

Strictly speaking, this is teleportation, not a quantum repeater. If these detectors work with telecom frequencies with low noise, this is greta news!

Jul 10th 2008 2:48 GMT

Sirs:

Combine this with the photos of a light beam as reported recently in a science journal, and soon we'll have clear photos of the angels dancing on the pin head.

Seriously, a marvelous achievement.

Ignore this grouchy old village idiot.

Jacomus

ansatbnl wrote:
Jul 11th 2008 1:22 GMT

a report on the construction of the device is at arxiv.org as a free download.http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0807/0807.0330.pdfAdding a shifted negative of a signal to the signal itself is a tried and true technique. Using it at the avalanche inception is the tour-de-force of this technique.

mark1950 wrote:
Jul 11th 2008 1:31 GMT

I believe about eighteen months ago there was an experiment where a photon emiter had a blocker to stop the photon. What happened was that a photon hit the reciever at 1.2 times the speed of light. They have now got the device too get up to 1.8 times the speed of light. This event was timed using a micro wave transmitter sending a signal to a reciever at the exact same time. They believe it was due to quatom tunneling that a photon came from "somewhere" too hit the reciever. Music was sent using the device, so one might say that the first faster then light data has been sent. PRETTY FAR OUT stuff I should say.

MARK1950

Ebdebebbede wrote:
Jul 14th 2008 9:11 GMT

Commercialization of quantum cryptography is the wave of the future, and always will be. ID Quantique and MagiQ Technologies have been in the field for a while. Their customers are primarily university researchers. That, in itself, says something to potential speculators.Not only is quantum communication limited to short distances (~100 km), it is excruciatingly slow. One kilobit/sec is considered fast. While the short distances mean quantum communication is best suited to high-density metro markets (NYC, DC, London), the slow speed means that potential customers could do better with a courier carrying a DVD and an assault rifle.Quantum communication can be used to exchange keys for booting up a high-speed, albeit conventional, cryptography system. However, the risk of eavesdropping would be the same as today.Finally, as Bruce Schneier has commented, quantum cryptography does not addresses more serious security problems, such as weak passwords.

Starf1ghter wrote:
Jul 15th 2008 1:27 GMT

Ok someone needs to explain this article in simple english. Something without the word quantum involved would be appreciated.

Back to top ^^
1-6 of 6
Beta v1.3

Advertisement

Advertisement

Latest blog posts - All times are GMT

The limits to power
From Banyan's notebook - 3 hrs 26 mins ago
Democracy is here to stay
From Multimedia - September 9th, 22:32
Link exchange
From Free exchange - September 9th, 21:25
The supply side
From Free exchange - September 9th, 21:02
Sound as a punt
From Free exchange - September 9th, 20:36
Learning Arabic with Rosetta Stone?
From Johnson - September 9th, 19:49
More from our blogs »

Products & events

Stay informed today and every day

Subscribe to The Economist's free e-mail newsletters and alerts.


Subscribe to The Economist's latest article postings on Twitter


See a selection of The Economist's articles, events, topical videos and debates on Facebook.

Advertisement