Quantum Remote Entanglement for Medium-Free Secure Communication?
Wesley Joon-Wie Tann

TL;DR
This paper explores the possibility of medium-free quantum entanglement enabling secure communication without physical relays, supported by theoretical evidence and quantum circuit simulations.
Contribution
It proposes that quantum entanglement's non-locality allows for remote entanglement independent of physical media, challenging traditional relay-based quantum communication.
Findings
Evidence of remote entanglement in superconducting systems
Simulations demonstrating medium-free secure quantum communication
Theoretical support for non-locality governing entanglement
Abstract
Present-day quantum communication predominantly depends on trusted relays (e.g., quantum repeaters, low-Earth-orbit satellite) connected by optical fiber cables to transmit information. However, recent evidence supports a decades-old concept that quantum entanglement, harnessed by current quantum communication systems, does not necessarily rely on a physical relay medium. In modern quantum communication networks, this trusted relay infrastructure is (1) susceptible to security attacks, (2) limited by the channel capacity, (3) subject to decoherence loss, and (4) expensive to set up. The instantaneous and faster-than-light activities of quantum entanglement occurring in quantum communication have suggested guidance by some non-locality nature. On the contrary, neither ground nor space-relays have shown or been demonstrated to embody it. It is proposed in this paper that the non-locality…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
