this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2025
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Scientists at Kyoto University and Hiroshima University have achieved a breakthrough in quantum physics by successfully identifying the elusive W state of quantum entanglement, solving a 25-year-old challenge in the field[^1].

The team developed a method to measure entangled W states using photonic quantum circuits, demonstrating it successfully with three photons. This achievement is significant because W states, along with GHZ states, are fundamental building blocks for quantum networks[^1][^3].

"More than 25 years after the initial proposal concerning the entangled measurement for GHZ states, we have finally obtained the entangled measurement for the W state as well," said Shigeki Takeuchi, the study's corresponding author[^1].

The breakthrough enables single-shot identification of quantum states, eliminating the need for numerous measurements that grow exponentially with added photons. This advancement opens paths for:

  • Quantum teleportation of information between distant locations
  • New quantum communication protocols
  • More efficient quantum computing methods
  • Transfer of multi-photon quantum entangled states[^1][^8]

The research team used highly stable optical quantum circuits that could operate for extended periods without active control. They validated their method by successfully distinguishing different types of three-photon W states[^8].

[^1]: ScienceDaily - New quantum breakthrough could transform teleportation and computing

[^3]: RSInc - New Quantum breakthrough could transform Teleportation and Computing

[^8]: SciTechDaily - Scientists Capture W State, Unlocking Quantum Teleportation

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[โ€“] Coopr8@kbin.earth 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)
[โ€“] gbzm@piefed.social 5 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Unfortunately not. Quantum teleportation is an awful name: it's called that way because it implies "destroying" a quantum state somewhere, and "recreating" it identically somewhere else, effectively transmitting information. However, the process also requires a classical information transfer at some point, and is absolutely not instantaneous . It's only useful for cryptography because it's mathematically impossible to listen in on this information being transferred without disturbing it.

It's one of the most unfavorable coolness-of-name vs. coolness-of-actual-thing ratio in physics.