Queensland researchers have made progress on the quantum effects that could underpin future encryption methods.

The phenomenon of quantum nonlocality is important in the development of new quantum information networks, in which transmission security is guaranteed by the laws of physics.

The idea is to use the entanglement of particles – Einstein’s ‘spooky action at a distance’ - to ensure security.

A team from Griffith’s Centre for Quantum Dynamics in Australia have demonstrated how to rigorously test if pairs of photons remain entangled even under adverse conditions that mimic those outside the lab.

They demonstrated that quantum nonlocality (entanglement) can still be verified even when many of the photons are lost by absorption or scattering as they travel from source to destination through an optical fibre channel.

The experimental study and techniques are published in the journal Science Advances.

Team leader Professor Geoff Pryde said a quantum link had to pass a demanding test that confirmed the presence of quantum nonlocality between particles at either end.

“Failing the test means an eavesdropper might be infiltrating the network,” he said.

“As the length of quantum channel grows, less and less photons successfully pass through the link, because no material is perfectly transparent and absorption and scattering take their toll.

“This is a problem for existing quantum nonlocality verification techniques with photons.  Every photon lost makes it easier for the eavesdropper to break the security by mimicking entanglement.”

Developing a method to test entanglement in presence of loss has been an outstanding challenge for the scientific community for quite some time.

The team used a different approach – quantum teleportation – to overcome the problem of lost photons.

Dr Morgan Weston, first author of the study, said they selected the few photons that survived the high-loss channel and teleported those lucky photons into another clean and efficient, quantum channel.

“There, the chosen verification test, called quantum steering, could be done without any problem,” she said.

“Our scheme records an additional signal that lets us know if the light particle has made it through the transmission channel. This means that the failed distribution events can be excluded up front, allowing the communication to be implemented securely even in the presence of very high loss.”

But this upgrade does not come easy - the teleportation step requires additional high-quality photon pairs on its own.

These extra photon pairs have to be generated and detected with extremely high efficiency, in order to compensate for the effect of the lossy transmission line.

This was possible to achieve thanks to state of art photon source and detection technology, jointly co-developed with the US National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado.

Although the experiment was performed in the laboratory, it tested channels with photon absorption equivalent to about 80 km of telecommunications optical fibre.

The team aims to integrate their method into quantum networks that are being developed by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology, and test it in real-life conditions.