| Literature DB >> 28442568 |
Yuan Cao1,2, Yu-Huai Li1,2, Zhu Cao3, Juan Yin1,2, Yu-Ao Chen1,2, Hua-Lei Yin1,2, Teng-Yun Chen1,2, Xiongfeng Ma3, Cheng-Zhi Peng4,2, Jian-Wei Pan4,2.
Abstract
Intuition from our everyday lives gives rise to the belief that information exchanged between remote parties is carried by physical particles. Surprisingly, in a recent theoretical study [Salih H, Li ZH, Al-Amri M, Zubairy MS (2013) Phys Rev Lett 110:170502], quantum mechanics was found to allow for communication, even without the actual transmission of physical particles. From the viewpoint of communication, this mystery stems from a (nonintuitive) fundamental concept in quantum mechanics-wave-particle duality. All particles can be described fully by wave functions. To determine whether light appears in a channel, one refers to the amplitude of its wave function. However, in counterfactual communication, information is carried by the phase part of the wave function. Using a single-photon source, we experimentally demonstrate the counterfactual communication and successfully transfer a monochrome bitmap from one location to another by using a nested version of the quantum Zeno effect.Keywords: counterfactual communication; heralded single photon source; quantum Zeno effect; quantum imaging; quantum optics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28442568 PMCID: PMC5441699 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1614560114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205