| 
			 
 
 
			
			 from Arstechnica Website 
 
 It only works at night, but the technique sets a new distance record. 
			Nature, 
			2012. DOI:
			
			10.1038/nature11332  (About 
			DOIs). 
			 
			
			 used to track an entangled photon signal across Qinghai Lake. 
			The statue is 
			Padmasambhava at the Lotus Temple at Gangcha. 
			 
 
			This is of particular concern in 
			
			quantum 
			networks, which typically involve a small number of entangled 
			photons. Direct transmission through free space (vacuum or air) 
			experiences less photon loss, but it's very difficult to align a 
			distant receiver perfectly with the transmitter so that photons 
			arrive at their destination. 
 
			Using this method, Juan Yin and 
			colleagues performed quantum teleportation (copying of a quantum 
			state) using multiple entangled photons through open air between two 
			stations 97 kilometers apart across a lake. Additionally, they 
			demonstrated entanglement between two receivers separated by 
			101.8km, transmitted by a station on an island roughly halfway 
			between them. 
 
			Nevertheless, their results achieved 
			larger distances for multi-photon teleportation and three-point 
			entanglement than before, and the tracking system used may even 
			enable ground-to-satellite quantum communication - at least if it 
			happens at night. 
 
			Atmospheric turbulence also contributes 
			to photon loss in the air, with the losses increasing the farther 
			the signal must travel. 
 
			With few photons to spare in quantum 
			communication, real-time tracking and acquisition is necessary. The 
			researchers solved this problem using beacon lasers, bright beams 
			that carry no information, but can be used to aim both transmitter 
			and receiver, and wide-angle cameras. 
 In the first experiment, one photon was sent 97km across Qinghai Lake (using a telescope to focus the beam), while the second was analyzed locally. 
 
			Using these photons, the researchers 
			copied the quantum state from the laboratory to the far station, 
			achieving quantum teleportation over a much larger distance than 
			previously obtained. 
 
			The distance between the receivers - 
			101.8km - was far enough to create a 3 microsecond delay between 
			measurements of the photon polarization. 
 Author Yuao Chen told Ars via e-mail that they are working on solving the problem for daytime communication, but since the signal consists of single photons, it's not clear how this will work - the number of received photons fluctuated with the position of the Moon, so noise appeared to be a significant problem for them. 
 
			Point-to-point communication will need 
			to solve that problem as well before satellite-to-ground quantum 
			networks are practical. 
 
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