Researchers Develop a High-Speed, Scalable Network Using Optical Frequency Combs in a Quantum Internet Revolution
A group of researchers has successfully developed a polychromatic continuous-variable quantum communication network, which is a significant advancement for the future of international communications. The team has overcome a major obstacle in quantum networking by utilizing optical frequency combs (OFCs): scaling to numerous users without compromising connection speed or security.
The study offers a design for a high-capacity, multi-node “Quantum Internet” and is led by Guihua Zeng and Yuehan Xu from Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s State Key Laboratory of Photonics and Communications.
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The Polychromatic Revolution
Different wavelengths or “colors” of light are polychromatic resources that have been used for decades in conventional communication networks to increase data speeds and scalability through multiplexing. However, comparable methods have historically proven difficult to apply in quantum communication while preserving the sensitive quantum states needed for security.
Optical frequency combs, which are collections of distinct, stable, and uniformly spaced spectral lines produced by mode-locked lasers, are what the researchers used. By offering several parallel frequency modes, these combs function as a “quantum ruler,” enabling numerous users to share one optical fiber at once.
The researchers showed that their polychromatic quantum network may potentially reach a secret key rate that does not drop as the number of users rises, in contrast to traditional multiplexing systems. Building high-density quantum facilities in urban settings requires this scalability.
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Unprecedented Performance Standards
In the experimental setting, a Gaussian-modulated continuous-variable quantum key distribution (CV-QKD) protocol was used in both direct-transmission and round-trip network topologies. The researchers used dual-comb interference detection technology, a complex technique that guarantees high-precision measurements of the quantum states, to identify the signals across several modes.
The experiment’s speed and range were astounding:
- Ultra-High-Speed Short Range: The network attained an asymptotic total secret key rate of 8.75 Gbps for 19 users at a distance of 5 km.
- Metropolitan Range: Under composable security criteria, the system maintained a rate of 89.10 Mbps at 40 km, and 13.66 Mbps when composable finite-size security was taken into consideration.
- Long-Distance Reach: Even after taking finite-size effects into consideration, the network was able to distribute keys across 120 km of fiber at a rate of 0.82 Mbps.
When compared to earlier experimental quantum access networks, the ability to accommodate 19 concurrent users at these rates is a substantial advancement.
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Maintaining Quantum Security
Mode isolation is one of the trickiest problems in polychromatic networking. Information may “leak” across channels or be intercepted by an eavesdropper, sometimes known as “Eve” in cryptography, since many quantum signals flow over the same fiber at different frequencies.
To tightly limit the amount of data that an eavesdropper may obtain, the study team included finite mode isolation in their security analysis. They made sure that the created secret keys will continue to be substantially safe even in a multi-user setting when signals are tightly spaced by recalculating these constraints.
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Building the Future Quantum Internet
This solution offers the technological support required for high-speed multi-node networks, making it more than simply a lab curiosity. The researchers think their discovery provides a workable approach for the “Quantum Internet,” a future system that uses continuous-variables to manage the enormous amounts of data needed in a linked society.
A number of significant Chinese universities, including Donghua University and the Hefei National Laboratory, collaborated in the research. The Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project and the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation provided funding for it.
The next generation of secure international communication may depend on the incorporation of quantum security using optical frequency combs into current fiber infrastructures as conventional networks approach their physical constraints.
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