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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Scheidl is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Scheidl.


Nature Physics | 2007

Entanglement-based quantum communication over 144km

Rupert Ursin; Felix Tiefenbacher; Tobias Schmitt-Manderbach; Henning Weier; Thomas Scheidl; M. Lindenthal; B. Blauensteiner; T. Jennewein; J. Perdigues; P. Trojek; B. Omer; Martin Fürst; M. Meyenburg; J. Rarity; Z. Sodnik; C. Barbieri; Harald Weinfurter; Anton Zeilinger

Quantum Entanglement is the essence of quantum physics and inspires fundamental questions about the principles of nature. Moreover it is also the basis for emerging technologies of quantum information processing such as quantum cryptography, quantum teleportation and quantum computation. Bells discovery, that correlations measured on entangled quantum systems are at variance with a local realistic picture led to a flurry of experiments confirming the quantum predictions. However, it is still experimentally undecided whether quantum entanglement can survive global distances, as predicted by quantum theory. Here we report the violation of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) inequality measured by two observers separated by 144 km between the Canary Islands of La Palma and Tenerife via an optical free-space link using the Optical Ground Station (OGS) of the European Space Agency (ESA). Furthermore we used the entangled pairs to generate a quantum cryptographic key under experimental conditions and constraints characteristic for a Space-to-ground experiment. The distance in our experiment exceeds all previous free-space experiments by more than one order of magnitude and exploits the limit for ground-based free-space communication; significantly longer distances can only be reached using air- or space-based platforms. The range achieved thereby demonstrates the feasibility of quantum communication in space, involving satellites or the International Space Station (ISS).


Nature Physics | 2006

Free-Space distribution of entanglement and single photons over 144 km

Rupert Ursin; Felix Tiefenbacher; Tobias Schmitt-Manderbach; Henning Weier; Thomas Scheidl; M. Lindenthal; B. Blauensteiner; Thomas Jennewein; Josep Perdigues; P. Trojek; B. Oemer; M. Fuerst; M. Meyenburg; John Rarity; Zoran Sodnik; Cesare Barbieri; Harald Weinfurter; Anton Zeilinger

Quantum Entanglement is the essence of quantum physics and inspires fundamental questions about the principles of nature. Moreover it is also the basis for emerging technologies of quantum information processing such as quantum cryptography, quantum teleportation and quantum computation. Bells discovery, that correlations measured on entangled quantum systems are at variance with a local realistic picture led to a flurry of experiments confirming the quantum predictions. However, it is still experimentally undecided whether quantum entanglement can survive global distances, as predicted by quantum theory. Here we report the violation of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) inequality measured by two observers separated by 144 km between the Canary Islands of La Palma and Tenerife via an optical free-space link using the Optical Ground Station (OGS) of the European Space Agency (ESA). Furthermore we used the entangled pairs to generate a quantum cryptographic key under experimental conditions and constraints characteristic for a Space-to-ground experiment. The distance in our experiment exceeds all previous free-space experiments by more than one order of magnitude and exploits the limit for ground-based free-space communication; significantly longer distances can only be reached using air- or space-based platforms. The range achieved thereby demonstrates the feasibility of quantum communication in space, involving satellites or the International Space Station (ISS).


Nature | 2012

Quantum teleportation over 143 kilometres using active feed-forward

Xiao-song Ma; T. M. Herbst; Thomas Scheidl; Daqing Wang; Sebastian Kropatschek; William Naylor; Bernhard Wittmann; Alexandra Mech; Johannes Kofler; Elena Anisimova; Vadim Makarov; Thomas Jennewein; Rupert Ursin; Anton Zeilinger

The quantum internet is predicted to be the next-generation information processing platform, promising secure communication and an exponential speed-up in distributed computation. The distribution of single qubits over large distances via quantum teleportation is a key ingredient for realizing such a global platform. By using quantum teleportation, unknown quantum states can be transferred over arbitrary distances to a party whose location is unknown. Since the first experimental demonstrations of quantum teleportation of independent external qubits, an internal qubit and squeezed states, researchers have progressively extended the communication distance. Usually this occurs without active feed-forward of the classical Bell-state measurement result, which is an essential ingredient in future applications such as communication between quantum computers. The benchmark for a global quantum internet is quantum teleportation of independent qubits over a free-space link whose attenuation corresponds to the path between a satellite and a ground station. Here we report such an experiment, using active feed-forward in real time. The experiment uses two free-space optical links, quantum and classical, over 143 kilometres between the two Canary Islands of La Palma and Tenerife. To achieve this, we combine advanced techniques involving a frequency-uncorrelated polarization-entangled photon pair source, ultra-low-noise single-photon detectors and entanglement-assisted clock synchronization. The average teleported state fidelity is well beyond the classical limit of two-thirds. Furthermore, we confirm the quality of the quantum teleportation procedure without feed-forward by complete quantum process tomography. Our experiment verifies the maturity and applicability of such technologies in real-world scenarios, in particular for future satellite-based quantum teleportation.Xiao-song Ma, 2 Thomas Herbst, Thomas Scheidl, Daqing Wang, Sebastian Kropatschek, William Naylor, Alexandra Mech, 1 Bernhard Wittmann, 1 Johannes Kofler, 1 Elena Anisimova, 6 Vadim Makarov, 6 Thomas Jennewein, Rupert Ursin, and Anton Zeilinger 2, 3 Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI), Austrian Academy of Sciences, Boltzmanngasse 3, A-1090 Vienna, Austria Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5, A-1090 Vienna, Austria Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5, A-1090 Vienna, Austria Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, Hans-Kopfermann-Str. 1, 85748 Garching/Munich, Germany Institute for Quantum Computing and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada Department of Electronics and Telecommunications, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway (Dated: May 1, 2014)


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Significant-Loophole-Free Test of Bell's Theorem with Entangled Photons.

Marissa Giustina; Marijn A. M. Versteegh; Soeren Wengerowsky; Johannes Handsteiner; Armin Hochrainer; Kevin Phelan; Fabian Steinlechner; Johannes Kofler; Jan-Åke Larsson; Carlos Abellan; Waldimar Amaya; Valerio Pruneri; Morgan W. Mitchell; Joern Beyer; Thomas Gerrits; Adriana E. Lita; Lynden K. Shalm; Sae Woo Nam; Thomas Scheidl; Rupert Ursin; Bernhard Wittmann; Anton Zeilinger

Local realism is the worldview in which physical properties of objects exist independently of measurement and where physical influences cannot travel faster than the speed of light. Bells theorem states that this worldview is incompatible with the predictions of quantum mechanics, as is expressed in Bells inequalities. Previous experiments convincingly supported the quantum predictions. Yet, every experiment requires assumptions that provide loopholes for a local realist explanation. Here, we report a Bell test that closes the most significant of these loopholes simultaneously. Using a well-optimized source of entangled photons, rapid setting generation, and highly efficient superconducting detectors, we observe a violation of a Bell inequality with high statistical significance. The purely statistical probability of our results to occur under local realism does not exceed 3.74×10^{-31}, corresponding to an 11.5 standard deviation effect.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Communication with spatially modulated light through turbulent air across Vienna

Mario Krenn; Robert Fickler; Matthias Fink; Johannes Handsteiner; Mehul Malik; Thomas Scheidl; Rupert Ursin; Anton Zeilinger

Transverse spatial modes of light offer a large state-space with interesting physical properties. For exploiting these special modes in future long-distance experiments, the modes will have to be transmitted over turbulent free-space links. Numerous recent lab-scale experiments have found significant degradation in the mode quality after transmission through simulated turbulence and consecutive coherent detection. Here, we experimentally analyze the transmission of one prominent class of spatial modes?orbital-angular momentum (OAM) modes?through 3 km of strong turbulence over the city of Vienna. Instead of performing a coherent phase-dependent measurement, we employ an incoherent detection scheme, which relies on the unambiguous intensity patterns of the different spatial modes. We use a pattern recognition algorithm (an artificial neural network) to identify the characteristic mode patterns displayed on a screen at the receiver. We were able to distinguish between 16 different OAM mode superpositions with only a ?1.7% error rate and to use them to encode and transmit small grayscale images. Moreover, we found that the relative phase of the superposition modes is not affected by the atmosphere, establishing the feasibility for performing long-distance quantum experiments with the OAM of photons. Our detection method works for other classes of spatial modes with unambiguous intensity patterns as well, and can be further improved by modern techniques of pattern recognition.


Nature Physics | 2009

High-fidelity transmission of entanglement over a high-loss free-space channel

Alessandro Fedrizzi; Rupert Ursin; Thomas Herbst; Matteo Nespoli; Robert Prevedel; Thomas Scheidl; Felix Tiefenbacher; Thomas Jennewein; Anton Zeilinger

An experiment distributing entangled photons over 144 km significantly raises the bar on distance, channel loss and transmission time—encouraging news with regard to future long-distance quantum-communication networks.


Europhysics News | 2009

Space-quest: experiments with quantum entanglement in space

Rupert Ursin; Thomas Jennewein; Johannes Kofler; Josep Perdigues; L. Cacciapuoti; C. J. de Matos; Markus Aspelmeyer; A. Valencia; Thomas Scheidl; Antonio Acín; Cesare Barbieri; G. Bianco; Caslav Brukner; J. Capmany; Sergio Cova; Dirk Giggenbach; Walter R. Leeb; Robert H. Hadfield; Raymond Laflamme; Norbert Lütkenhaus; G. J. Milburn; Momtchil Peev; Timothy C. Ralph; John Rarity; Renato Renner; E. Samain; Nikolaos Solomos; Wolfgang Tittel; Juan P. Torres; Morio Toyoshima

Quantumentanglement is, according to Erwin Schrodinger in 1935, the essence of quantumphysics. It inspires fundamental questions about the principles of nature. By testing the entanglement of particles,we are able to ask fundamental questions about realism and locality in nature. Local realismimposes certain constraints in statistical correlations ofmeasurements onmulti-particle systems. Quantummechanics, however, predicts that entangled systems havemuch stronger than classical correlations that are independent of the distance between the particles and are not explicablewith classical physics.


New Journal of Physics | 2009

Feasibility of 300 km quantum key distribution with entangled states

Thomas Scheidl; Rupert Ursin; Alessandro Fedrizzi; Sven Ramelow; Xiao-song Ma; Thomas Herbst; Robert Prevedel; Lothar Ratschbacher; Johannes Kofler; Thomas Jennewein; Anton Zeilinger

A significant limitation of practical quantum key distribution (QKD) setups is currently their limited operational range. It has recently been emphasized (Ma et al 2007 Phys. Rev. A 76 012307) that entanglement- based QKD systems can tolerate higher channel losses than systems based on weak coherent laser pulses (WCP), in particular, when the source is located symmetrically between the two communicating parties, Alice and Bob. In the work presented here, we experimentally study this important advantage by implementing different entanglement-based QKD setups on a 144km free-space link between the two Canary Islands of La Palma and Tenerife. We established three different configurations where the entangled photon source was placed at Alices location, asymmetrically between Alice and Bob and symmetrically in the middle between Alice and Bob, respectively. The resulting quantum channel attenuations of 35, 58 and 71dB, respectively, significantly exceed the limit for WCP systems (Ma et al 2007 Phys. Rev. A 76 012307). This confirms that QKD over distances of 300km and even more is feasible with entangled state sources placed in the middle between Alice and Bob.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Quantum erasure with causally disconnected choice

Xiao-song Ma; Johannes Kofler; Angie Qarry; Nuray Tetik; Thomas Scheidl; Rupert Ursin; Sven Ramelow; Thomas Herbst; Lothar Ratschbacher; Alessandro Fedrizzi; Thomas Jennewein; Anton Zeilinger

The counterintuitive features of quantum physics challenge many common-sense assumptions. In an interferometric quantum eraser experiment, one can actively choose whether or not to erase which-path information (a particle feature) of one quantum system and thus observe its wave feature via interference or not by performing a suitable measurement on a distant quantum system entangled with it. In all experiments performed to date, this choice took place either in the past or, in some delayed-choice arrangements, in the future of the interference. Thus, in principle, physical communications between choice and interference were not excluded. Here, we report a quantum eraser experiment in which, by enforcing Einstein locality, no such communication is possible. This is achieved by independent active choices, which are space-like separated from the interference. Our setup employs hybrid path-polarization entangled photon pairs, which are distributed over an optical fiber link of 55 m in one experiment, or over a free-space link of 144 km in another. No naive realistic picture is compatible with our results because whether a quantum could be seen as showing particle- or wave-like behavior would depend on a causally disconnected choice. It is therefore suggestive to abandon such pictures altogether.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Quantum optics experiments using the International Space Station: a proposal

Thomas Scheidl; Eric Wille; Rupert Ursin

We propose performing quantum optics experiments in a ground-to-space scenario using the International Space Station, which is equipped with a glass viewing window and a photographers lens mounted on a motorized camera pod. A dedicated small add-on module with single-photon detection, time-tagging and classical communication capabilities would enable us to perform the first-ever quantum optics experiments in space. We present preliminary design concepts for the ground and flight segments and study the feasibility of the intended mission scenario.

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Rupert Ursin

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Anton Zeilinger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Matthias Fink

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Fabian Steinlechner

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Felix Tiefenbacher

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Xiao-song Ma

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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