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Jun. 3, 2021 , 12:43 PM
A beam of ethereal blue laser light enters a specialized crystal. There it turns red, a sign that each photon has split into a pair with lower energies—and a mysterious connection. The particles are now quantum mechanically “entangled,” linked like identical twins who know each other’s thoughts despite living in distant cities. The photons zip through a tangle of fibers, then ever so gently deposit the information they encode into waiting clouds of atoms.
The transmogrifications are “a little bit like magic,” exults Eden Figueroa, a physicist at Stony Brook University. He and colleagues have concocted the setup on a few laboratory benches cluttered with lenses and mirrors. But they have a much bigger canvas in mind.
New-yorkUnited-statesStony-brookUniversity-of-chicagoIllinoisVietnamRepublic-ofBostonMassachusettsChinaCaliforniaBrookhaven-national-laboratoryThe Netherlands invests 615 million euros in Quantum Delta NL, bringing quantum technology to the next level in Europe
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- With objectives to scale up to 100 start-ups, 2,000 PhDs and engineers and three large corporate R&D labs by 2027
DELFT, Netherlands, April 12, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --
The Netherlands continues to play a leading role in building a world-class European quantum ecosystem. To amplify this, the Dutch government formalized the Dutch strategy on quantum technologies by presenting today an investment plan of €615 million over seven years. This impulse sets in motion a flywheel that could lead to a total public and private investment of an estimated €3.6 billion over the duration of the Quantum Delta NL-program.
BostonMassachusettsUnited-statesNetherlandsAmsterdamNoord-hollandDutchMona-keijzerRonald-hansonFreeke-heijmanQuantum-delta-nl-programEconomic-affairsAt the end of last year, a monumental breakthrough was announced with the first case of long-distance, high-fidelity quantum teleportation. This was quickly followed by the creation of a cryogenic quantum computer chip, and even a hologram using quantum entanglement just after that. You could say it has been a pretty big few months for the eventual goal of a quantum Internet, which could theoretically change everything when it comes to computing speed, privacy, and capabilities.
However, new research suggests that could be even closer than we think.
In a study conducted by two institutions in the Netherlands, scientists have created the first quantum network using quantum entanglement, successfully connecting three devices together. The research could lay the groundwork for creating a large-scale quantum network, a dream for many scientists in the field. Their work was published in the journal Science.
NetherlandsRonald-hansonநெதர்லாந்துரொனால்ட்-ஹான்சன்