Zürcher Nachrichten - Quantum entanglement: the 'spooky' science behind physics Nobel

EUR -
AED 4.33068
AFN 75.469752
ALL 95.373151
AMD 434.277746
ANG 2.110664
AOA 1082.522302
ARS 1649.3201
AUD 1.625387
AWG 2.125541
AZN 1.995362
BAM 1.95525
BBD 2.368733
BDT 144.309375
BGN 1.967056
BHD 0.444075
BIF 3500.514569
BMD 1.179218
BND 1.49128
BOB 8.126712
BRL 5.795969
BSD 1.176069
BTN 111.059736
BWP 15.789555
BYN 3.323564
BYR 23112.673547
BZD 2.365334
CAD 1.60922
CDF 2670.92815
CHF 0.915964
CLF 0.026705
CLP 1050.534264
CNY 8.019567
CNH 8.014278
COP 4394.962773
CRC 540.647802
CUC 1.179218
CUP 31.249278
CVE 110.233968
CZK 24.335173
DJF 209.431043
DKK 7.476713
DOP 69.940311
DZD 156.042073
EGP 62.197491
ERN 17.688271
ETB 183.635605
FJD 2.5742
FKP 0.865141
GBP 0.864688
GEL 3.15439
GGP 0.865141
GHS 13.24827
GIP 0.865141
GMD 86.695397
GNF 10319.09507
GTQ 8.979472
GYD 246.070729
HKD 9.236463
HNL 31.265199
HRK 7.539087
HTG 153.976654
HUF 353.989694
IDR 20491.802496
ILS 3.421264
IMP 0.865141
INR 111.348251
IQD 1540.666287
IRR 1546544.457081
ISK 143.876452
JEP 0.865141
JMD 185.35782
JOD 0.83607
JPY 184.706847
KES 151.887242
KGS 103.087829
KHR 4718.671646
KMF 492.91338
KPW 1061.295931
KRW 1723.792866
KWD 0.362798
KYD 0.980124
KZT 543.556983
LAK 25791.739363
LBP 105318.051896
LKR 378.643408
LRD 215.809247
LSL 19.294268
LTL 3.481924
LVL 0.713297
LYD 7.436906
MAD 10.756172
MDL 20.111338
MGA 4912.617048
MKD 61.617654
MMK 2475.701034
MNT 4221.724801
MOP 9.482631
MRU 47.007767
MUR 55.210619
MVR 18.164382
MWK 2038.926022
MXN 20.468904
MYR 4.62374
MZN 75.363639
NAD 19.294268
NGN 1609.632307
NIO 43.277817
NOK 10.859773
NPR 177.695977
NZD 1.984381
OMR 0.453622
PAB 1.176069
PEN 4.066255
PGK 5.193538
PHP 71.360333
PKR 327.773928
PLN 4.23982
PYG 7183.977637
QAR 4.29879
RON 5.219576
RSD 117.336968
RUB 87.545155
RWF 1724.114644
SAR 4.442688
SBD 9.456659
SCR 17.540162
SDG 708.118256
SEK 10.86732
SGD 1.503385
SHP 0.880405
SLE 29.067335
SLL 24727.608129
SOS 672.110794
SRD 44.101584
STD 24407.432557
STN 24.493105
SVC 10.291103
SYP 130.399137
SZL 19.281572
THB 37.974336
TJS 10.972811
TMT 4.127263
TND 3.416038
TOP 2.839274
TRY 53.474588
TTD 7.970756
TWD 36.928418
TZS 3063.737527
UAH 51.660757
UGX 4406.759452
USD 1.179218
UYU 46.906795
UZS 14265.98398
VES 588.70806
VND 31022.868147
VUV 138.279547
WST 3.192258
XAF 655.772393
XAG 0.014675
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.186895
XCG 2.119603
XDR 0.81557
XOF 655.772393
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.390924
ZAR 19.327106
ZMK 10614.362644
ZMW 22.390697
ZWL 379.707727
  • GSK

    -0.0900

    50.41

    -0.18%

  • BCC

    -2.0900

    70.67

    -2.96%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    105.38

    +2.15%

  • AZN

    0.3300

    182.85

    +0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    24.14

    -1.78%

  • RBGPF

    0.7000

    63.61

    +1.1%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4100

    16.37

    -2.5%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    58.28

    +0.34%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    23.11

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.15

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.1140

    23.534

    +0.48%

  • NGG

    0.9800

    86.89

    +1.13%

  • VOD

    0.5100

    16.2

    +3.15%

  • RELX

    0.0759

    33.58

    +0.23%

  • BP

    -0.4700

    43.34

    -1.08%

Quantum entanglement: the 'spooky' science behind physics Nobel
Quantum entanglement: the 'spooky' science behind physics Nobel / Photo: HERBERT PFARRHOFER - APA/AFP/File

Quantum entanglement: the 'spooky' science behind physics Nobel

This year's physics Nobel prize was awarded Tuesday to three men for their work on a phenomenon called quantum entanglement, which is so bizarre and unlikely that Albert Einstein was sceptical, famously calling it "spooky".

Text size:

So how exactly does it work?

Even people with degrees in physics struggle to understand it -- and some who do still find parts "hard to swallow," said Chris Phillips, a physicist at Imperial College London.

To explain the phenomenon he used the example of a photon -- "a single unit of light" -- though the theory is believed to hold true for other particles.

If a photon is put through a "special crystal", it can be split into separate photons, he told AFP.

"They're different colours from the one you started with," Phillips said, "but because they started from one photon, they are entangled".

This is where it gets weird. If you measure one photon it instantly affects the other -- no matter how far you separate them.

This is not supposed to happen. Einstein's theory of relativity says nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.

And they are inextricably bound together. When you observe the first photon, there are even odds that it will show itself as "either up or down", Phillips said. But if it is up, then its twin is instantly forced down, or vice versa.

- New way to kill Schroedinger's cat -

He extended the famous quantum thought experiment of Schroedinger's cat, in which a hypothetical animal locked inside a box with a flask of poison remains simultaneously alive and dead -- until the moment the box is opened.

For quantum entanglement, if you have two cats in two boxes, by opening one you would "kill that cat and instantaneously -- on the other side of the universe -- the other cat has been killed," Phillips said.

Phillips has seen this "extremely strange thing" first hand in his laboratory, where he has two beams of photons set up.

"I can put my hand in one beam and something happens to the other beam on the other side of the room instantaneously -- I see a needle flick," he said.

"That would still be true if my laboratory was millions of miles across."

It was the fact that this occurs instantly that bothered Einstein, who dismissed this element of quantum entanglement -- called non-locality -- as "spooky action at a distance" in 1935.

He instead believed that "hidden variables" must somehow be behind what was happening.

In 1964, influential physicist John Stewart Bell found a way to measure whether there were in fact hidden variables inside quantum particles.

Two decades later, French physicist Alain Aspect, who won the Nobel on Tuesday, and his team were among the first able to test Bell's theory in a laboratory.

By testing its limits, they found that "quantum mechanics resists all possible attacks," Aspect said in an interview published by the Nobel Foundation after his win on Tuesday.

- 'Totally crazy' -

In doing so, Aspect proved Einstein wrong. But he was magnanimous to history's greatest physicist.

"I like to say that Einstein's owes a great, great merit in raising the question," Aspect said, adding that "non-locality does not allow you to send a useful message faster than light".

Even Aspect finds it weird to have accepted the idea of something "totally crazy" like non-locality into "my mental images," he said.

The other physics Nobel winners, Austria's Anton Zeilinger and John Clauser of the US, also tested Bell's theory, ruling out loopholes and helping pave the way for what has been called the "second quantum revolution".

Discoveries by Zeilinger, dubbed the "quantum pope", have shown the potential for quantum entanglement to be used in encryption, quantum teleportation and more.

Phillips from Imperial College London has developed a prototype the size of a hi-fi sound system that uses quantum entanglement to diagnose breast cancer.

"We have to be humble in the face of physics," Phillips said, adding that it was the same as any another aspect of nature.

"It just is."

Y.Keller--NZN