Distant entangled atoms boost precision in quantum measurements

Researchers have harnessed quantum entanglement to link atoms across space, achieving unprecedented accuracy in measuring physical quantities. By separating entangled atomic clouds, the team improved the detection of electromagnetic fields. This breakthrough could refine atomic clocks and gravity sensors.

A collaboration between scientists at the University of Basel and the Laboratoire Kastler Brossel in Paris has demonstrated a novel use of quantum entanglement for enhanced precision measurements. Entanglement, a quantum phenomenon where particles remain connected despite separation, defies classical physics and was spotlighted in the 2022 Nobel Prize for confirming the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox.

Led by Prof. Dr. Philipp Treutlein and Prof. Dr. Alice Sinatra, the researchers entangled the spins of ultracold atoms—tiny magnetic-like properties—and split them into up to three distinct clouds. This allowed measurements of varying electromagnetic fields with reduced quantum uncertainty and cancellation of common disturbances.

"We have now extended this concept by distributing the atoms into up to three spatially separated clouds," Treutlein noted, building on his group's work from about 15 years ago when they first entangled atoms at a single site. Postdoc Yifan Li highlighted the innovation: "So far, no one has performed such a quantum measurement with spatially separated entangled atomic clouds, and the theoretical framework for such measurements was also still unclear."

The method starts by entangling spins in one cloud before dividing it, enabling high-precision field mapping with few measurements. PhD student Lex Joosten explained potential applications: "Our measurement protocols can be directly applied to existing precision instruments such as optical lattice clocks," where atoms in laser lattices act as ultra-accurate timekeepers. It could also enhance atom interferometers in gravimeters, which detect subtle gravity variations.

Published in Science (2026, vol. 391, issue 6783, p. 374), the study by Yifan Li, Lex Joosten, Youcef Baamara, Paolo Colciaghi, Alice Sinatra, Philipp Treutlein, and Tilman Zibold advances quantum metrology, an established field exploiting quantum effects for better sensing.

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Researchers at RPTU University of Kaiserslautern-Landau have simulated a Josephson junction using ultracold atoms, revealing key quantum effects previously hidden in superconductors. By separating Bose-Einstein condensates with a moving laser barrier, they observed Shapiro steps, confirming the phenomenon's universality. The findings, published in Science, bridge atomic and electronic quantum systems.

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Researchers have experimentally observed a hidden quantum geometry in materials that steers electrons similarly to how gravity bends light. The discovery, made at the interface of two oxide materials, could advance quantum electronics and superconductivity. Published in Science, the findings highlight a long-theorized effect now confirmed in reality.

Researchers have mathematically shown that a quantum neural network could help measure hard-to-access properties of quantum objects, potentially cheating the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. By injecting randomness into the network, scientists might determine multiple incompatible properties more precisely. This approach could speed up applications in quantum computing and chemistry.

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Researchers have produced the most intricate time crystal to date using an IBM superconducting quantum computer. This two-dimensional quantum material repeats its structure in time, cycling through configurations indefinitely. The achievement advances understanding of quantum systems and their potential for material design.

 

 

 

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