Teleportation fidelity the big winner in the quantum lottery

Sophie Zhao

by Phil Dooley

Running your quantum system as a lottery turns out to be a way to improve the transmission of data via quantum teleportation.

Researchers at the Research School of Physics used a probabilistic twist to develop a new transmission protocol that set a new record in data transmission: 92 percent fidelity, which more than halves the loss in previous experiments.

The new protocol will enable encrypted data, for example in finance or military settings, to be sent with higher accuracy.

“Our protocol improves the capability of the quantum teleporter to protect fragile quantum states during long-distance transmission, making the system resilient to noise and loss,” said lead researcher Dr Sophie Jie Zhao, from the Department of Quantum Sciences and the CQC2T ARC Centre of Excellence, who is the lead author in the team’s publication in Nature Communications.

Quantum teleportation is already being used in encrypted networks. It allows information to be shared instantly between linked, or entangled, quantum objects. 

However, the entanglement between the objects can easily be destroyed by interactions with external entities. This at once makes quantum teleportation extremely secure – as any tampering instantly destroys the data transfer – but also very prone to degradation through noise due to environmental interactions.

With entanglement degradation limiting their existing teleportation’s fidelity and distance, the team set their mind to improving the teleportation efficacy by leveraging the paradoxes of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

In these experiments, the ends of the teleportation link are two photons from the same source, which creates entanglement in their properties. These photons are sent to two separate locations, untouched, which leaves their properties unknown, and able to appear in any possible state.

The signaller then gets the information to be teleported to interact with one of the photons, and measures the photon’s properties – in this case amplitude and phase – making the photon choose a state. This causes the other photon (the receiver) to instantly choose its state as well. Because the two photons are linked, information about the signaller’s experiment can be deduced by the receiver.

This deduction relies on the sender separately conveying to the receiver the result of the experiment. This does not reveal the teleported information, as it is the result of the mashup between that information and the original photon. However, this result acts as a key that allows the receiver to work backwards from the result at their end and disentangle the teleported information.

It is crucial that the sender can’t know what the teleported information is – that would constitute a measurement and collapse the quantum information, said University of Queensland researcher and CQC2T member Professor Tim Ralph.

“The information needs to be hidden in uncertainty so the sender doesn’t know exactly what they are sending. The more they know about the signal, the more they destroy it,” he said.

Quantum uncertainty resulting from the mixing of possible states can be cancelled out with the key, however uncertainty resulting from noise from entanglement degradation is harder to cancel out.

To filter this noise the team leveraged the fact that the mixed states have a Gaussian distribution. They realised that a lottery, a protocol in which a subset of the measurements was selected randomly in a way that actually narrowed the Gaussian distribution, while other measurements were randomly discarded, could help filter out noise.

“Adding an element of chance to our protocol has the effect of distilling the quantum information,” Dr Zhao said.

“The post-selection effectively biases the Gaussian distribution in favour of high-amplitude outcomes than outcomes close to the origin of phase space, hence acting as an amplifier. Since this amplification is noiseless and takes over from part of the amplification applied by the receiver in standard teleportation protocols, the teleported states suffer less from the noise added due to imperfect entanglement.”

An interesting quirk of the system is that the balance between the probabilistic factor and the noise reduction can be tuned. By simply reducing the probability of measurements being selected in the protocol the teleportation fidelity can be increased.

To achieve their record 92 percent fidelity the team used a success rate of less than one in a hundred thousand, sampling the system for around two hours.

In the new protocol, the success of the teleportation relies on the stability of the laser system, instead of being limited by environmental noise, Dr Zhao said.

“You can always get better fidelity if you are willing to sacrifice your success rate. But then you need a longer sampling time.

“If the system were stable enough to allow us to sample for say, 20 hours, then I believe we could go above 95 percent,” she said.

Originally published on ANU Physics website

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Schrodinger’s Cat – the video is now live!

Many of you have heard me play this song live, and I’ve been planning to make a video for it.  The question was, how? Enter Wasabi the WonderCat, who offered to star in the video, some gentle impulse from Dr Kip Stewart, and I had inspiration.

Finally after 10 months of hard work teaching myself to animate, here it is!

The song was born as I wondered about how Schrodinger’s cat felt about being in a box for more than 80 years. You see, he was first put there to prove a point.

The originators of the Copenhagen Interpretation, Niels Bohr and Werner
Heisenberg proposed that reality as we knew it didn’t exist, things were
blurred across multiple states, until a measurement was made.

On the other hand, Einstein and Schrodinger found this preposterous, and
to illustrate came up with the idea of the cat in the box. 

While the fame of Schrodinger’s Cat’s has spread, it didn’t really settle the debate.

I want to know, what does the cat think, being in the box for nearly a century? Surely, it’s the dogs’ turn now!

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Spyplanes, Enzymes & Alpha Centauri: Physics in the Cloud videos published

Relive the excitement of Physics in the Cloud, October 2021. Top comedy, fascinating science, a kids story and even a visit from Ziggy Stardust and his mate Alfred E Newton.

They’ll fill us in on the Breakthrough Starshot Initiative – a plan to send tiny spacecraft to the nearest star, Alpha Centauri for the first time. After launch they will be propelled towards Alpha Centauri by a hugely powerful array of lasers on earth – they’ll surf on the light waves using tiny sails.

But will they ever return?

Includes a lively Q&A session at the end of the talk, with Alessandro Tuniz and Boris Kuhlmey from University of Sydney School of Physics.

Part 1 of Spyplanes, Enzymes & Alpha Centauri: Physics in the Cloud 2021, sponsored by Australian Institute of Physics and Laboratories Credit Union.

Watch the playlist here to see the full show.

 

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Oh When the Science!

A science version of Oh When the Saints! I’m singing the hopes and dreams of every scientist. They dream of getting published, winning grants, tenure and a Nobel Prize! In my experience, to have success in science you need to clone yourself – twice. And then a bit of prayer could be handy…

More of Phil and co is at the Dramatis Scientificae website. I created the Oh When the Science video for AIP Physics in the Cloud, October 2021. Want more songs? Try a Chemistry love song about sodium chloride, or Pluto!

Apologies to Brian Schmidt, who was the original VC cited in this song (and whose name scanned better) but as this was a NSW-based show I had to switch to a selection of Sydney-based vice-chancellors. I apologiese also to Attila Brungs – whose name I eliminated due to bad scansion.

I thank the generation of musicians who brought the song into being around 100 years ago – there seems to be no single original composer, although a few have tried to claim it.

This is part of the 2021 Physics in the Pub (-Cloud, thanks to lockdown 2021) which Phil brings you in partnership with the Australian Institute of Physics NSW Branch.

Oh When the Science! sings Phil
Oh When the Science!

It was a laugh creating this video. But I drove my partner crazy – listening to me lip sync the song a thousand times… badly as you can see. I need a camera operator!!

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If you ruled the world…

shine dome

I’m honoured to have been asked to act in “What if Scientists Ruled the World” – a forum theatre piece run by Rebus Theatre for the Australian Academy of Science and Falling Walls Festival, based in Berlin

The audience has a chance to prevent disaster (which I will surely cause… cos I am scripted that way).

It’s an amazing process to build this story in a week with the talented folk from Rebus Theatre.

Join in – wherever you are in the world, and let’s work out a way to unfuck the world!

Find out more and register at the Academy of Science website.

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Using AI to study Humans Falling Over

Dr Maryam Ghahramani from University of Canberra gives a lovely talk about her work on balance in humans. Because of her humour and charisma it’s a great pub science communication about human healthThis set is also part of the Phil Up On Science – 2021 International Women’s Day in the Pub Show.

To develop your own sci comm skills with Dr Phil, visit the Science Communication training page.

Also, if you’d like a pub night about your science, find out more at the Science In the Pub page.

This set filmed March 9, 2021, at Smiths Alternative in Canberra, Australia, by Sandie Walters.

Above all, sponsored by the Faculty of Science and Technology, University of Canberra.

In conclusion,  music used is Electricity by Phil Dooley; Thing Theme by Phil Dooley and Chris Stewart.

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A cute salty love song

The sweetest, saltiest love song about how sodium and chlorine fell in love…

A cute tune by the McGarrigle Sisters, telling the heartwarming story of salt – sodium and chlorine – falling in love.

Perfect for high school and university chemistry lectures, complete with valences, electron shells and ionic bonding of NaCl.

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The Physics of Beer

It’s a common pub prank to tap the top of a friend’s beer, to make it suddenly erupt in froth. Funny to some people, annoying to others; but to Spanish physicist Javier Rodríguez-Rodríguez, intriguing.

Rodríguez-Rodríguez, from the University Carlos III of Madrid, decided to investigate the strange phenomenon, and in the process has discovered a host of complex physics in a glass of beer, which could help scientists understand all kinds of processes, from volcanic eruptions to the formation of asteroids.

“There are many different physical phenomena going on in a beer glass, and every time you drink a beer, all this physics is right before your eyes,” Rodríguez-Rodríguez says.

His thirst for knowledge has even led him to convince his PhD students to drop beer off a 100-metre high tower to study bubble formation in the micro-gravity environment of free-fall.

“Carbonated beverages are portable laboratories that can be used to demonstrate in an amusing way the working of many flows also found in nature and industry,” he and co-author Robert Zenit write in a review of the beer facts they have discovered, published in the magazine Physics Today.

The key to many of the processes in beer is that it is carbonated – a colloquial term for it being a super-saturated carbon dioxide solution. As the beer brews, fermentation by yeast emits micro-farts of carbon dioxide, building up pressure in the bottle.

Some of the carbon dioxide gas dissolves into the beer: the fraction is determined by Henry’s law, which holds that the higher the pressure, the more gas is dissolved.

When the bottle is opened, the pressure is released, meaning that amount of gas the liquid can hold is lower: suddenly the solution is super-saturated. But it takes a while for the solution to catch up. Over a few hours the carbon dioxide seeps out until it reaches its new equilibrium point, termed by beer lovers as “flat”.

The rate at which the gas departs, and the dynamics it sets off, forms the basis for much of beer’s intriguing behaviour – such as in the beer-tapping prank.

Rodríguez-Rodríguez’s study of it was first published in the journal Physical Review Letters and revealed that the trigger for the beer volcano is a pressure wave sweeping upward through the liquid.

The sudden jolt leaves the beer behind momentarily. At the sides of the bottle, the effect is minimal as the glass slides past the beer.

However, the downward shift of the base of the bottle has much greater ramifications, and creates a sudden drop in pressure in the liquid at the bottom. This low-pressure region propagates upward, triggering the dissolved carbon dioxide in the beer to suddenly form bubbles.

The beer then catches up with the bottle and the pressure rebounds. This sudden high pressure fragments the bubbles that have only just formed. Rodríguez-Rodríguez found each one breaks into as many as a million smaller bubbles.

These, now in a cloud formation, begin to rise, growing as they suck in more carbon dioxide. It takes a second or two before they reach the top and froth up.

The rise of the cloud is due to the buoyancy of the bubbles, which set Rodríguez-Rodríguez and his team thinking about what would happen in zero gravity.

Rather than sending beer into space, they decided to drop some off the 100-metre high drop tower of the Centre of Applied Space Technology and Microgravity (ZARM) in Bremen, Germany.

For the actual experiment they had to find a substitute liquid. “We cannot use beer,” says Rodríguez-Rodríguez. “It’s too dirty.”

Using carbonated water, the team could observe the evolution of the bubble cloud as it hovered within the liquid, capturing high-speed video of the process.

As well as being of relevance to the formation of bodies such as asteroids and meteorites in low gravity environments, Rodríguez-Rodríguez’s research addresses the potentially important issue of astronauts drinking beer.

The buoyancy of the bubbles is what enables the gas from the carbonated drink to rise from the stomach and be expelled, but Rodríguez-Rodríguez points out that in zero gravity, they would not be buoyant.

“The bubbles would not be able to escape the liquid within the digestive system, leading to painful bloating in the stomach and intestines. So, sorry, no bubbly drinks for space people!” he and Zenit write in their review article.

Rodríguez-Rodríguez admits to enjoying drinking his experimental apparatus sometimes, but is careful to point out he is not doing so with government research funds. He says the guidelines for research preclude expenditure on alcohol, so he buys all beer for experiments from his own money.

“I consider it the Rodríguez-Rodríguez Foundation for the Advancement of Science,” he adds.

Results from the microgravity experiments are in preparation, and will be submitted to a journal soon.

Original published 29/5/19 https://cosmosmagazine.com/physics/in-lager-veritas-the-physics-of-beer

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