Quantum computers can now talk across five kilometers
A specialized network in California has successfully linked quantum processors through standard fiber optic cables, allowing them to share information using the strange laws of entanglement.
In a laboratory in Berkeley, California, researchers have built a bridge between two quantum computers that are five kilometers apart. While traditional computers send data through pulses of light that represent ones and zeros, this network uses a phenomenon called entanglement. This allows two separate quantum bits, or qubits, to become so deeply linked that the state of one instantly influences the other, regardless of the physical distance between them.