| Fermilab and partners achieve sustained, high-fidelity quantum teleportation 
 
 December 15, 2020
 
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 A viable quantum internet — a network in which information stored  in qubits is shared over long distances through entanglement — would  transform the fields of data storage, precision sensing and computing,  ushering in a new era of communication.
 
 This month, scientists at Fermilab, a U.S. Department of Energy  Office of Science national laboratory, and their partners took a  significant step in the direction of realizing a quantum internet.
 
 In a paper published in  PRX Quantum,  the team presents for the first time a demonstration of a sustained,  long-distance (44 kilometers of fiber) teleportation of qubits of  photons (quanta of light) with fidelity greater than 90%. The qubits  were teleported over a fiber-optic network using state-of-the-art  single-photon detectors and off-the-shelf equipment.
 
 “We’re thrilled by these results,” said Fermilab scientist Panagiotis  Spentzouris, head of the Fermilab quantum science program and one of  the paper’s co-authors. “This is a key achievement on the way to  building a technology that will redefine how we conduct global  communication.”
 
 
 
  In  a demonstration of high-fidelity quantum teleportation at the Fermilab  Quantum Network, fiber-optic cables connect off-the-shelf devices (shown  above), as well as state-of-the-art R&D devices. Photo: Fermilab 
 Quantum teleportation is a “disembodied” transfer of quantum states  from one location to another. The quantum teleportation of a qubit is  achieved using quantum entanglement, in which two or more particles are  inextricably linked to each other. If an entangled pair of particles is  shared between two separate locations, no matter the distance between  them, the encoded information is teleported.
 
 The joint team — researchers at Fermilab, AT&T, Caltech, Harvard  University, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and University of Calgary —  successfully teleported qubits on two systems: the  Caltech Quantum Network, or CQNET, and the  Fermilab Quantum Network,  or FQNET. The systems were designed, built, commissioned and deployed  by Caltech’s public-private research program on Intelligent Quantum  Networks and Technologies, or  IN-Q-NET.
 
 “We are very proud to have achieved this milestone on sustainable,  high-performing and scalable quantum teleportation systems,” said Maria  Spiropulu, Shang-Yi Ch’en professor of physics at Caltech and director  of the IN-Q-NET research program. “The results will be further improved  with system upgrades we are expecting to complete by Q2 2021.”
 
 CQNET and FQNET, which feature near-autonomous data processing, are  compatible both with existing telecommunication infrastructure and with  emerging quantum processing and storage devices. Researchers are using  them to improve the fidelity and rate of entanglement distribution, with  an emphasis on complex quantum communication protocols and fundamental  science.
 
 The achievement comes just a few months after the U.S. Department of Energy  unveiled its blueprint for a national quantum internet at a press conference in Chicago.
 
 “With this demonstration we’re beginning to lay the foundation for  the construction of a Chicago-area metropolitan quantum network,”  Spentzouris said. The Chicagoland network, called the  Illinois Express Quantum Network,  is being designed by Fermilab in collaboration with Argonne National  Laboratory, Caltech, Northwestern University and industry partners.
 
 This research was supported by DOE’s Office of Science through the  Quantum Information Science-Enabled Discovery (QuantISED) program.
 
 “The feat is a testament to success of collaboration across  disciplines and institutions, which drives so much of what we accomplish  in science,” said Fermilab Deputy Director of Research Joe Lykken. “I  commend the IN-Q-NET team and our partners in academia and industry on  this first-of-its-kind achievement in quantum teleportation.”
 
 Learn more about the result.
 
 Fermilab is America’s premier national laboratory for particle  physics and accelerator research. A U.S. Department of Energy Office of  Science laboratory, Fermilab is located near Chicago, Illinois, and  operated under contract by the Fermi Research Alliance LLC, a joint  partnership between the University of Chicago and the Universities  Research Association, Inc. Visit Fermilab’s website at  www.fnal.gov and follow us on Twitter at  @Fermilab.
 
 The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic  research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to  address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more  information, visit  science.energy.gov.
 
 
 Tagged:  California,  Caltech,  IN-Q-NET,  quantum communication,  quantum information science,  quantum science,  quantum teleportation
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