PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers first achieve quantum information masking experimentally

2021-05-18
(Press-News.org) The research team, led by Academician GUO Guangcan from University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, collaborating with LI Bo from Shangrao Normal University and CHEN Jingling from Nankai University, achieved the masking of optical quantum information. The researchers concealed quantum information into non-local quantum entangled states. The study was published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Quantum information masking as one of the new information processing protocol transfers quantum information from a single quantum carrier to the quantum entangled state between multiple carriers avoiding the information decode from single quantum carrier. Not all the kind of quantum states can achieve masking, but the variety of that helps people to select.

The quantum information masking can be used in a wide situation, not only in actual quantum information tasks such as quantum secret sharing but also the further understanding in the conservation of quantum information.

In this research, the team realized quantum information masking for the first time based on the linear optics research platform.

Compared with the theoretical value, the fidelity of the entangled state can be 97.7%, meaning that the secure transmission of simple images can be complete for the three-party quantum secret sharing based on quantum information masking.

This study has great significance for theoretical research and practical application of secure quantum communication. Based on it, the feasibility of quantum information masking as a brand-new quantum information processing protocol is improved.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Colonization of the Antilles by South American fauna: Giant sunken islands as a passageway

Colonization of the Antilles by South American fauna: Giant sunken islands as a passageway
2021-05-18
Fossils of land animals from South America have been found in the Antilles, but how did these animals get there? According to scientists from the CNRS, l'Université des Antilles, l'Université de Montpellier and d'Université Côte d'Azur, land emerged in this region and then disappeared beneath the waves for millions of years, explaining how some species were able to migrate to the Antilles. This study will be published in June 2021 issue in Earth-Science Reviews. Fossils of land animals from the Antilles, including mammals and amphibians, have their closest relatives in South America. The crossing of the Caribbean Sea from South America was therefore possible, but how? As swimming across the continent ...

Megaprojects threaten water justice for local communities

Megaprojects threaten water justice for local communities
2021-05-18
Urban megaprojects tend to be the antithesis of good urban planning. They have a negative impact on local water systems, deprive local communities of water-related human rights, and their funders and sponsors have little accountability for their impact. These are the findings of the University of Adelaide's Dr Scott Hawken from the School of Architecture and Built Environment who led a review of the impact of urban megaprojects on water justice in South East Asia. "Urban megaprojects have severe implications for environmental processes," said Dr Hawken. "They have a major impact on hydrological systems and during all phases of development affect water security and human ...

LHAASO discovers a dozen PeVatrons and photons exceeding 1 PeV and launches ultra-high-energy gamma

LHAASO discovers a dozen PeVatrons and photons exceeding 1 PeV and launches ultra-high-energy gamma
2021-05-18
China's Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO)--one of the country's key national science and technology infrastructure facilities--has found a dozen ultra-high-energy (UHE) cosmic accelerators within the Milky Way. It has also detected photons with energies exceeding 1 peta-electron-volt (quadrillion electron-volts or PeV), including one at 1.4 PeV. The latter is the highest energy photon ever observed. These findings overturn the traditional understanding of the Milky Way and open up an era of UHE gamma astronomy. These observations will prompt people to rethink the mechanism by which high-energy particles are generated and propagated in the Milky Way, and will encourage people to explore more deeply violent celestial phenomena and their physical processes ...

'Bite' defects revealed in bottom-up graphene nanoribbons

Bite defects revealed in bottom-up graphene nanoribbons
2021-05-18
Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), narrow strips of single-layer graphene, have interesting physical, electrical, thermal, and optical properties because of the interplay between their crystal and electronic structures. These novel characteristics have pushed them to the forefront in the search for ways to advance next-generation nanotechnologies. While bottom-up fabrication techniques now allow the synthesis of a broad range of graphene nanoribbons that feature well-defined edge geometries, widths, and heteroatom incorporations, the question of whether or not structural disorder is present in these atomically precise GNRs, and to what extent, is still subject to debate. The answer to ...

Crystalline supermirrors for trace gas detection in environmental science and medicine

Crystalline supermirrors for trace gas detection in environmental science and medicine
2021-05-18
Manufactured in a new process based on crystalline materials, these low-loss mirrors promise to open up completely new application areas, for example in optical respiratory gas analysis for early cancer detection or the detection of greenhouse gases. This work will be published in the current issue of the journal Optica. In 2016 researchers at the LIGO laser interferometer succeeded in the first direct observation of gravitational waves, which had originally been predicted by Albert Einstein in 1916. A significant contribution to the observation of this wave-like propagation of disturbances in space-time, which was rewarded with the Nobel Prize a year later, was provided by the laser mirrors of the kilometer-long interferometer assembly. ...

Spintronics: Improving electronics with finer spin control

Spintronics: Improving electronics with finer spin control
2021-05-18
Spintronics is an emerging technology for manufacturing electronic devices that take advantage of electron spin and its associated magnetic properties, instead of using the electrical charge of an electron, to carry information. Antiferromagnetic materials are attracting attention in spintronics, with the expectation of spin operations with higher stability. Unlike ferromagnetic materials, in which atoms align along the same direction like in the typical refrigerator magnets, magnetic atoms inside antiferromagnets have antiparallel spin alignments that cancel out the net magnetization. Scientists have worked on controlling the alignment of magnetic atoms within antiferromagnetic ...

Turn problems into opportunities: Photorespiration for improved plant metabolism

Turn problems into opportunities: Photorespiration for improved plant metabolism
2021-05-18
In today's plants, photorespiration dissipates some of the energy produced by photosynthesis and releases CO2. It begins when the enzyme RuBisCO acts on oxygen instead of carbon dioxide and creates toxic side-products requiring costly recycling reactions. The detoxification process uses up fixed carbon and wastes energy, thus strongly limiting agricultural productivity. Scientists generally pursue two approaches to minimizes the deleterious effects of photorespiration: mimic the carbon concentrating mechanism of C4 plants or introduce new metabolic pathways to bypass the photorespiration. Researchers led by Andreas Weber from Heinrich ...

New catalyst proved efficient to electrosynthesis of ammonia

New catalyst proved efficient to electrosynthesis of ammonia
2021-05-18
In a recent research, researchers led by Prof. ZHANG Haimin from the Institute of Solid State Physics of the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science (HFIPS) realized the synthesis of Mo single atoms anchored on activated carbon (Mo-SAs/AC) by the formed Mo-Ox bonds. The result was published on Chemical Communications. According to the researchers, this new oxygen-coordinated molybdenum single atom catalyst was proved efficient to electrosynthesis of ammonia. The O-coordinated environment in this study, different from N-coordinated environment reported before, provided the sites to anchor Mo single atoms and form Mo-Ox sites, which could be used as the active centers for the adsorption and activation of N2, resulting in high ...

When one become two: Separating DNA for more accurate nanopore analysis

When one become two: Separating DNA for more accurate nanopore analysis
2021-05-18
A new software tool developed by Earlham Institute researchers will help bioinformaticians improve the quality and accuracy of their biological data, and avoid mis-assemblies. The fast, lightweight, user-friendly tool visualises genome assemblies and gene alignments from the latest next generation sequencing technologies. Called Alvis, the new visualisation tool examines mappings between DNA sequence data and reference genome databases. This allows bioinformaticians to more easily analyse their data generated from common genomics tasks and formats by producing efficient, ready-made vector images. First author and post-doctoral scientist at the Earlham Institute Dr Samuel Martin in the Leggett Group, said: "Typically, alignment tools output plain ...

Electric cars: Special dyes could prevent unnecessary motor replacements

Electric cars: Special dyes could prevent unnecessary motor replacements
2021-05-18
One day in the near future dyes in electric motors might indicate when cable insulation is becoming brittle and the motor needs replacing. Scientists at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU), together with ELANTAS, a division of the specialty chemicals group ALTANA, have developed a new process that enables the dyes to be directly integrated into the insulation. By changing colour, they reveal how much the insulating resin layer around the copper wires in the motor has degraded. The results were published in the journal "Advanced Materials". Modern combustion engines have long had detectors that recognise, for example, when an oil change is needed, saving unnecessary inspections. Electric motors also show signs of wear. Inside, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

nTIDE February 2025 Jobs Report: Labor force participation rate for people with disabilities hits an all-time high

Temperamental stars are distorting our view of distant planets

DOE’s Office of Science is now Accepting Applications for Office of Science Graduate Student Research Awards

Twenty years on, biodiversity struggles to take root in restored wetlands

Do embedded counseling services in veterinary education work? A new study says “yes.”

Discovery of unexpected collagen structure could ‘reshape biomedical research’

Changes in US primary care access and capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic

Cardiometabolic trajectories preceding dementia in community-dwelling older individuals

Role of ELK3 in ferroptosis of rheumatoid arthritis fibroblast-like synoviocytes

Team of Prof. Woo Young Jang Department of Orthopedic Surgery, KU Anam Hospital wins the Best Paper Award from the Korean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society

Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation announces recipients of inaugural Keith Terasaki Mid-Career Innovation Award

The impact of liver graft preservation method on longitudinal gut microbiome changes following liver transplant

Cardiovascular health risks continue to grow within Black communities, action needed

ALS survival may be cut short by living in disadvantaged communities

No quantum exorcism for Maxwell's demon (but it doesn't need one)

Balancing the pressure: How plant cells protect their vacuoles

Electronic reporting of symptoms by cancer patients can improve quality of life and reduce emergency visits

DNA barcodes and citizen science images map spread of biocontrol agent for control of major invasive shrub

Pregnancy complications linked to cardiovascular disease in the family

Pancreatic cancer immune map provides clues for precision treatment targeting

How neighborhood perception affects housing rents: A novel analytical approach

Many adults report inaccurate beliefs about risks and benefits of home firearm access

Air pollution impacts an aging society

UC Davis researchers achieve total synthesis of ibogaine

Building better biomaterials for cancer treatments

Brain stimulation did not improve impaired motor skills after stroke

Some species of baleen whales avoid attracting killer whales by singing too low to be heard

Wasteful tests before surgery: Study shows how to reduce them safely

UCalgary researchers confirm best approach for stroke in medium-sized blood vessels

Nationwide, 34 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to help students move more

[Press-News.org] Researchers first achieve quantum information masking experimentally