From: Sam on
Quantum teleportation through open air

http://blogs.physicstoday.org/update/2010/05/quantum-teleportation-through.html?=PTFAVE

By Physics Today on May 17, 2010 10:17 AM

A central tenet of quantum information processing asserts that an
unknown qubit cannot be cloned (see Physics Today, February 2009, page
76). But the unknown state of one qubit can be transferred to another
qubit in a process termed quantum teleportation. The first
experimental demonstrations succeeded in teleporting a qubit state a
meter or so (see Physics Today, February 1998, page 18). Subsequent
experiments with photons, whose polarizations form a convenient basis
for quantum information, have used fiber optics to achieve
teleportation over hundreds of meters. But practical quantum
communication will require teleportation over much greater distances.
Jian-Wei Pan, Cheng-Zhi Peng, and coworkers at the University of
Science and Technology of China and Tsinghua University have now
transferred a qubit state through free space over a distance of 16 km,
from "Alice" in the Beijing suburb of Badaling, across towns and
roads, to "Bob" in Huailai, on the other side of Guanting Reservoir.
The experiment employed a standard teleportation protocol: Alice and
Bob each receive one of a pair of entangled photons; Alice measures
hers in combination with an unknown qubit and sends the result, by
classical means, to Bob; armed with that result, Bob projects his
photon onto the state of the unknown qubit. The new work, though, adds
many refinements, including novel telescope designs for open-air
transmission, active feedback control for increased stability, and
synchronized real-time information transfer. The resulting
teleportation fidelity was nearly 90%. Such high-fidelity
transmission, say the researchers, could help enable quantum
teleportation to orbiting satellites. (X.-M. Jin et al., Nat. Photon.,
in press, doi:10.1038/nphoton.2010.87.)—Richard J. Fitzgerald