Abstract
1 min readQuantum physics is well known for being counter-intuitive, or even bizarre. Quantum correlations have no equivalence in classical physics. This was all well known for years. But several discoveries in the 1990's changed the world. First, in 1991 Artur Ekert, from Oxford University, discovered that quantum correlations could be used to distribute cryptographic keys. Suddenly physicists realized that quantum correlations and its associated bizarre non-locality, could be exploited to achieve a useful task that would be impossible without quantum physics. What a revolution! And this was not the end. Three years later, Peter Shor, from the AT&T Laboratories, discovered an algorithm that breaks the most used public key crypto-systems. Shor's algorithm requires a quantum computer, yet another bizarre quantum device, a kind of computer that heavily exploits the quantum superposition principle. The following year, in 1995, a collaboration between six physicists and computer scientists from three continents led to the discovery of quantum teleportation, a process with a science-fiction flavour.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.