Call it the quantum Garden of Eden. Fifty or so miles east of New York City, on the campus of Brookhaven
National Laboratory, Eden Figueroa is one of the world’s pioneering gardeners planting the seeds of a
quantum internet. Capable of sending enormous amounts of data over vast distances, it would work not
just faster than the current internet but faster than the speed of light — instantaneously, in fact,
like the teleportation of Mr. Spock and Captain Kirk in Star Trek.
Sitting in Brookhaven’s light-filled cafeteria, his shoulder-length black hair fighting to free itself
from the clutches of a ponytail, Figueroa — a Mexico native who is an associate professor at Stony Brook
University — tries to explain how it will work. He grabs hold of two plastic coffee cup lids, a
saltshaker, a pepper shaker and a small cup of water, and begins moving them around on the lunch table
like a magician with cards.
“I’m going to have a detector here and a detector here,” he says, pointing to
the two lids. “Now there
are many possibilities. Either those two go in here” — he points to the saltshaker — “or the two go in
there,” nodding at the cup of water. “And then depending on what happened
there, that will be the
state,” he says, holding up the black pepper shaker, “that I’m preparing
here.”
Got that? Me neither. But don’t worry. Only a few hundred or so physicists in the U.S., Europe and China
really comprehend how to exploit some of the weirdest, most far-out aspects of quantum physics. In this
strange arena, objects can exist in two or more states at the same time, called superpositions; they can
interact with each other instantly over long distances; they can flash in and out of existence.
Scientists like Figueroa want to harness that bizarre behavior and turn it into a functioning, new-age
internet — one, they say, that will be ironclad for sending secure messages, impervious to hacking.
Already, Figueroa says his group has transmitted what he called “polarization
states” between the Stony
Brook and Brookhaven campuses using fiber infrastructure, adding up to 85 miles. Kerstin Kleese van Dam,
director of Brookhaven Lab’s Computational Science Initiative, says it is “one of
the largest quantum
networks in the world, and the longest in the United States.”
Next, Figueroa hopes to teleport his quantum-based messages through the air, across Long Island Sound,
to Yale University in Connecticut. Then he wants to go 50 miles east, using existing fiber-optic cables
to connect with Long Island and Manhattan.
Leading me to the back room of his laboratory at Stony Brook, where he heads the quantum information
technology group, Figueroa shows me a large table covered with a labyrinth of tiny mirrors, lasers and
electronics. “This is where we create these photons that carry superpositions,”
he says, “that then we
can send into the fiber. OK? It’s very simple.”
Right.
Curiously, all the implications of the quantum internet can be traced back to an experiment so
straightforward you can do it in your living room. Called the double slit experiment, it was first
performed more than 200 years ago by British polymath Thomas Young.
When shining a beam of light at a flat panel of material cut with two slits side-by-side, Young saw that
the light passing through the slits created an interference pattern of dark and bright bands on a screen
behind the panel. Only waves — light waves — emanating from the two slits could make such a pattern.
Young concluded that Isaac Newton, who published a particle theory of light in 1704, was wrong. Light
came in waves, not in particles.
But by the early 20th century, scientists had confirmed that light also came in particles — what
physicist Gilbert N. Lewis called photons, or quanta. And incredibly, researchers found that even when
single photons of light were sent flying one at a time at the double-slit panel, the interference
pattern still appeared on the other side. Each particle, they realized, was also a wave, spread out like
a schmear of cream cheese, and so traversed both slits simultaneously, thereby interfering with ...
itself on the other side.
Think on that. A single particle of light was in two places at once. That meant tickling a particle in
one place should make it giggle in the other. Observing it in one place should reveal something about
its twin. Erwin Schrödinger called the phenomenon entanglement — the very thing that Figueroa and other
researchers are harnessing now to send information. Simply put, adding information, such as a message or
data, to a particle in one location will make the data appear at the other location: the essence of
teleportation.
But how, I ask Figueroa, do all these wild ideas work in practice, with nuts and bolts and physical
devices?
“It’s just equipment and optics,” he tells me, pointing to an array of lasers
and mirrors configured on a
large table. “This is what people call Lego for adults.” On one end, a laser
aims high-energy blue
photons at a crystal, which breaks each one into a pair of lower-energy red photons; each of the two
resulting red photons is now entangled with the other. Figueroa points out the path the photons take
from mirror to mirror. “They do boop, boop, boop, boop, boop-boop-boop-boop. This is
why we have this
beautiful system. This is working, actually. This is beautiful,” he says.
Once entangled, one red photon is sent a short distance to a detector in Figueroa’s lab down the hall,
while the other can be sent a dozen miles away to a detector at the Brookhaven National Lab. The
differing distances would cause the two photons’ arrival times to fall slightly out of sync, which would
disrupt their entanglement. To prevent that, Figueroa had to find a way to coordinate the arrival times
of each down to the sub-nanosecond.
But how? Other quantum labs freeze their stay-at-home photons to near-absolute zero as a way of tapping
the brakes. Figueroa’s innovation, by contrast, works at room temperature: an inch-long glass tube
containing a fog of trillions of rubidium atoms. That first morning when I visit Figueroa’s lab, he puts
one of these tubes in my hand.
“What is it?” I ask him.
He smiles and says, “A quantum memory.”
Back when he was pursuing his doctorate at the University of Konstanz in Germany, Figueroa tells me, he
had asked his professor if it would be possible to build a system that would work at room temperature
without costly, complex freezers.
“I don’t think so,” he was told. “But prove me
wrong.”
So, he did. By bouncing photons off a series of carefully placed mirrors and bombarding a mist of
rubidium atoms with a network of lasers, Figueroa discovered that he could tune the wavelengths of
entangled photons to broadcast a signal that electrons in the rubidium fog could receive. Voila! The
entangled state of the photon is transferred, momentarily, into the entire cloud of atoms. A fraction of
a nanosecond later, the entangled photon moves on, arriving at the detector at the same moment as its
twin.
Incredibly, since completing his doctorate in 2012, igueroa has miniaturized the entire system for
holding quantum memories into a portable device smaller than a carry-on suitcase, small enough to mount
on an ordinary rack of computer servers at a data center — a crucial innovation if a quantum internet is
ever to go mainstream. As his colleague and collaborator Dimitrios Katramatos tells me later that day:
“They are portable, right? So, we loaded some of them up in a van one day and
brought them from Stony
Brook to Brookhaven.”
“He drove his wife’s van,” Figueroa says with a laugh.
“Ever since we have called it the Quantum Van.”
Another problem remains, however — one that neither Figueroa nor Katramatos (nor any other quantum
engineer in the world) has fully figured out so far: how to successfully transmit quantum-entangled
photons via fiber-optic cables past a barrier that appears around the 60-mile mark. Beyond it, photons
unintentionally interact with the cable, its housing or even sunlight from above-ground, thereby
destroying its entanglement.
The proposed solution, Figueroa explains, is something called “entanglement
swapping.” And quantum
engineers around the world are competing to apply the concept to a working prototype.
“The idea has by now been around for 20 years,” says Mikhail Lukin, a leading
quantum theoretician and
experimentalist at Harvard University. “Up to now, no one has succeeded in building
one capable of being
used in a practical application. As far as I understand, that’s what [Figueroa]’s group is trying to
do.”
To explain his plan, Figueroa leads me into a small meeting room, where he has it all mapped out on a
whiteboard.
“Let me show you something really cool,” he says.
Instead of creating only one pair of entangled photons and trying to send it to a lab 100 miles away, he
explains, a second set of entangled pairs are created in two different substations located at the
25-mile and 75-mile marks. These substations will shoot one photon of the pair toward each other and the
other toward the closest of the two labs. When one photon from each of the two pairs meets at the
50-mile mark, they will become entangled, automatically entangling the other remaining photons in the
distant laboratories. Once this entanglement has been shared, the information Figueroa wanted to send
can be teleported to the lab 100 miles away, overcoming the barrier.
“You see?” he says with charming enthusiasm. “Easy.”
And what about teleporting not just information, not just messages, but also particles, molecules,
cells or Captain Kirk? When the first experimental demonstration of entanglement was reported in
December 1997, IBM physicist Charles H. Bennett told The New York Times: “It would
be utterly
infeasible to do it even on something as small as a bacterium.” (Bennett, it should be
pointed out,
had coined the term quantum teleportation four years earlier, so you would think he would be
correct.)
But 21 years later, in the fall of 2018, Oxford University researchers reported exactly what Bennett
had said was “utterly infeasible”: the entanglement of a living bacterium
with a photon of light.
Not all physicists were persuaded by the findings, however, based as they were on the Oxford team’s
analysis of another group’s experiment. But then, nobody knows how far the quantum revolution will
go — certainly not Figueroa.
“Many of the things these devices will do, we are still trying to figure it out,”
he tells me. “At
the moment, we are just trying to create technology that works. The really far reaches of what is
possible are still to be discovered.”
Before leaving him, I ask Figueroa how his friends, family and neighbors try to understand his
cryptic work. He tells me a story about his father-in-law. Back when Figueroa was conducting
postdoctoral research in Germany, his wife’s father came to visit. After giving him a two-hour tour
of the lab, Figueroa asked him what he thought of it all.
“I didn’t understand a word you said in there,” his father-in-law said, “but I know
it’s the most
amazing thing I have ever seen.”
I could empathize. That’s how I felt before visiting Figueroa, interrogating him repeatedly over the
phone, and reading his papers with far-out titles like “A Single-Atom Quantum
Memory” and “Quantum
Memory for Squeezed Light.” But after all that, the whole thing began to make sense to me.
And I
hope it does now for you, too.
Kind of.
To build a quantum internet, you begin by entangling two photons so they behave like a single
unit, no matter how far they might be separated. Easy peasy. To do this, take one high-energy blue
photon, generated by a laser, and put it through a crystal that splits the photon into two
lower-energy
red photons. Now those photons are permanently entangled. Kind of like Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie,
entangled till the end of time as Brangelina. Now go ahead and send one of those photons to your
pal,
Steven Spielberg, and keep the other one for yourself.
Which one did you send, Brad or Angelina? Until Spielberg looks through his peephole to see who’s on
the
other side of the door, you both have a random, 50-50 chance of seeing one or the other. In the
quantum
world, everything exists in a statistical blur. But that’s OK, because Brad and Angelina are just
your
conduit for sending information from one to the other.
To send a meaningful message from Brad to Angelina, you need a third photon. Let’s call this one Jennifer Aniston. Put Jennifer through a polarizer — like the polarized lenses used in sunglasses — to set her atomic pole to a particular position on the vertical and horizontal axes. This gives you a quantum bit, or qubit, which can be a 0 or 1 at the same time. Similar to the 0s and 1s of digital data, qubits can be strung together to encode any message you want to send — say, the script for a new movie.
You’re almost there! Now you need to entangle the qubit called Jennifer with the photon called
Brad, who you’ve been hanging onto ever since you sent Angelina to Spielberg. To do that, put both
Jennifer and Brad into a beam splitter. When you do, Jennifer becomes entangled not only with Brad,
but
also with Angelina, by virtue of the preexisting Brangelina connection. All three of them are
entangled
with each other.
Now get this: Because photons are so sensitive, the very act of measuring them (to be sure that they
are
in fact entangled) destroys them. So, both Brad and Jennifer vanish in your lab. But wait: Spielberg
still has Angelina. And Angelina is still entangled with the information that Jennifer had. This
means —
ta da! — the information Jennifer was carrying has now been teleported, instantaneously, to
Spielberg’s
photon.
You did it! Now you can only hope Spielberg remembers to thank you at the Oscars. — D.H.