จีนจะเป็นประเทศแรกที่เปิดใช้ปีหน้า ยาวที่สุดในโลก ระหว่างปักกิ่งกับเซี่ยวไฮ้ ระบ Quantum ป้องกันการ แฮ๊กจาก nsa ของแยงกี้
ถ้าระบบ นี้มาใช้ เทรดหุ้น เจ้ามือจะเห็น ว่าเม่า ซื้อขายอะไรหรือเปล่า
Quantum communication advances in China
Staff Reporter
2015-02-04
China will soon complete a quantum communication line linking Beijing and Shanghai, as the country leads the way in technology that will offer a more secure delivery of information, the Chinese-language New Century magazine reports.
Pan Jianwei, a professor at the University of Science and Technology of China, is behind China's head position in the development of quantum communications technology, the magazine said.
A paper Pan co-wrote with Anton Zeilinger and other scientists in 1997, titled "Quantum Computing with Controlled-NOT and Few Qubits," was named by Nature as one of the 21 influential publications of the 20th century. Other publications chosen by the science journal include Roentgen's discovery of X-rays and Einstein's Theory of Relativity, according to the magazine.
Pan returned from Austria in 2001 and his team helped build the quantum communication hotlines used for China's military parade on Oct. 1, 2009, when his country celebrated its 60th anniversary.
According to Pan, his work in 2009 made China the first country in the world to adopt the technology for practical use.
Pan's team then designed a pilot quantum communication network in Hefei, Anhui province, where his university is located. The network at that time cost 60 million yuan (US$9.9 million) and was completed in February 2012 after 18 months of construction.
The network in Hefei offers government agencies, financial institutions, medical facilities, weapon manufacturers and research institutes lines that can make secure phone calls or video calls.
Another network was inaugurated in March 2014 in Jinan, Shandong province, the magazine added.
The two existing networks, along with a main communications line between Beijing and Shanghai, which is set to be completed this year, will begin providing transmission of information at the highest level of security between the two metropolises starting in 2016, according to the magazine.
Pan told the magazine that China is now building satellites to be deployed for quantum communications.
Jianyu Wang, deputy head of the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Shanghai branch, said during a forum late last year that China is set to launch the world's first quantum communication satellite in 2016.
Pan expects China can achieve delivery of the distribution of quantum key, which is used to decode encrypted information, between Asia and Europe by 2020 and around the world by 2030.
Zhao Yong, president of one of the two companies Pan's university set up to commercialize the technology, said quantum communication technology plays a supplementary role to offer more secure channels but will not replace existing methods.
Quantum communication advances in China|Technology|Business|WantChinaTimes.com
เมื่อไหร่ประเทศไทยจะใช้ Quantum ในการติดต่อสื่อสาร ปีหน้าจีนจะเปิดใช้แล้วระยะทางยาวที่สุดในโลก
ถ้าระบบ นี้มาใช้ เทรดหุ้น เจ้ามือจะเห็น ว่าเม่า ซื้อขายอะไรหรือเปล่า
Quantum communication advances in China
Staff Reporter
2015-02-04
China will soon complete a quantum communication line linking Beijing and Shanghai, as the country leads the way in technology that will offer a more secure delivery of information, the Chinese-language New Century magazine reports.
Pan Jianwei, a professor at the University of Science and Technology of China, is behind China's head position in the development of quantum communications technology, the magazine said.
A paper Pan co-wrote with Anton Zeilinger and other scientists in 1997, titled "Quantum Computing with Controlled-NOT and Few Qubits," was named by Nature as one of the 21 influential publications of the 20th century. Other publications chosen by the science journal include Roentgen's discovery of X-rays and Einstein's Theory of Relativity, according to the magazine.
Pan returned from Austria in 2001 and his team helped build the quantum communication hotlines used for China's military parade on Oct. 1, 2009, when his country celebrated its 60th anniversary.
According to Pan, his work in 2009 made China the first country in the world to adopt the technology for practical use.
Pan's team then designed a pilot quantum communication network in Hefei, Anhui province, where his university is located. The network at that time cost 60 million yuan (US$9.9 million) and was completed in February 2012 after 18 months of construction.
The network in Hefei offers government agencies, financial institutions, medical facilities, weapon manufacturers and research institutes lines that can make secure phone calls or video calls.
Another network was inaugurated in March 2014 in Jinan, Shandong province, the magazine added.
The two existing networks, along with a main communications line between Beijing and Shanghai, which is set to be completed this year, will begin providing transmission of information at the highest level of security between the two metropolises starting in 2016, according to the magazine.
Pan told the magazine that China is now building satellites to be deployed for quantum communications.
Jianyu Wang, deputy head of the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Shanghai branch, said during a forum late last year that China is set to launch the world's first quantum communication satellite in 2016.
Pan expects China can achieve delivery of the distribution of quantum key, which is used to decode encrypted information, between Asia and Europe by 2020 and around the world by 2030.
Zhao Yong, president of one of the two companies Pan's university set up to commercialize the technology, said quantum communication technology plays a supplementary role to offer more secure channels but will not replace existing methods.
Quantum communication advances in China|Technology|Business|WantChinaTimes.com