Quantum
entanglement, a decidedly weird effect influencing the realm of the incredibly
small, may apply to the “real world” but that doesn’t mean it’s easy to see.
After all, we're talking about individual pairs of particles here. Now, two new
papers – both published this week in Nature – describe how we’re now able to
see the phenomenon play out in unprecedented detail within microscopic
structures, meaning you can almost see the entangled objects with your own
eyes.
This isn’t
the first time this has been achieved, though: In 2011, using a pair of visible
diamonds, the vibrational states of both were shown to match in a state of
quantum entanglement. Also, back in 2009, scientists used tiny, but
macroscopic, superconductors to see the effects of quantum entanglement with
the naked eye too.
“Entanglement is achieved routinely in electrical circuits nowadays,” senior author of one of the papers, Prof. Mika Sillanpää of Aalto University, told IFLScience. “What makes a difference to our case is that we have the entire physical body (pretty much visible to the naked eye), all its atoms and electrons, participating in the collective entanglement.”
In any case,
both of these pieces of research (one led by the University of Vienna and the
Delft University of Technology, the other by Finland’s Aalto University)
represent an exciting step forward for the field.
Using two
different methods, the teams managed to get two types of bespoke, unconnected,
microscopically-sized oscillators – devices that generate periodically changing
electrical current – to demonstrate quantum entanglement. The latter group used
microwaves to force two aluminum oscillators into a single quantum state; the
former used lasers to do the same to wibbly silicon segments.
For those
understandably a bit lost at this point, here is a little primer as to what the
phenomenon actually is.
Sometimes,
two particles that are separated by a huge distance can act as if they’re a
pair. Their behaviors mirror each other instantaneously, and despite having no
clear physical connection, they behave as a single particle, or a single
system. Fundamental particles have a property called “spin”, which isn’t
literally them spinning, but it does describe some of their properties.
As
beautifully explained by Veritasium, when we measure particle spin, we
influence the orientation of this spin.
Now, if you
have two particles that are paired up, and you measure the spin of both, you
will find that they both have the opposite spin orientation to the other. This
means that, if you just measure one particle, you know what the spin of the
other will be – because, as it happens, they are entangled. Whatever the random
spin orientation of one particle, the other one in the pair shows the
“opposite” random spin. Whether they are a nanometer apart or half the galaxy
apart, this holds true, and it happens because the universe must preserve its
overall angular momentum.
Einstein,
who famously disliked the theory, skeptically referred to it as “spooky action
at a distance”.
Practically,
this means that we can make super-secure communications networks composed of paired
particles, with no "real", hackable line of communication between the
two. Indeed, that’s what China, in particular, is investing heavily in right
now.
In order to
set these quantum communication networks up, we need the technological
architecture to build them in the first place. That’s where the Vienna-led
paper comes in, whose team explains that its work, in conjunction with others,
may “provide a backbone for a future quantum internet based on superconducting
quantum computers”.
The
Aalto-led paper notes that their work, at present, will establish "a new
regime for experimental quantum mechanics”, useful for understanding the weird
world of the (normally) incredibly small even more. Saying that, the use of
their components in the construction of a quantum internet is possible,
"even quite likely," according to Sillanpää.
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