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by NSAID
2362 days ago
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>The team managed to send information from one chip to another instantly without them being physically or electronically connected Doesn't current quantum teleportation require optical connectivity because the state transfers along photons? The abstract says >Here, we report the demonstration of chip-to-chip quantum teleportation and genuine multipartite entanglement, the core functionalities in quantum technologies, on silicon-photonic circuitry So while there may not necessarily be a phsyical connection this does require line-of-sight by my read, and "silicon-photonic circuitry" sounds like this is all on one physical board. I guess I don't understand how this is "two different chips" as the article claims. Did they use two photomasks? Baby steps, I suppose. |
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The quantum teleportation happens after that. Once the particles are entangled, you can destroy yours in a very particular way that forces the other particle to instantaneously become either a copy of the particle you destroyed (i.e. its state is the same) or the opposite of the particle you destroyed (i.e. its state is something like a boolean negation). Only you know which one happened (you learn that when you destroy your particle) and need to send one bit of classical information to the other chip in order for it to know as well.
In other words, you can transmit one bit of classical information and sacrifice one entangled pair to "teleport" one qubit of quantum information.
It is called teleportation because the quantum information never actually physically moved, rather it instantaneously went to the other chip. To know how to use it, you still need that classical bit to be transmitted in order to know whether the quantum information underwent a boolean negation.