China Reports Progress in Ultra-Secure Satellite Transmission

Researchers enlisted quantum physics to send a “secret key” for encrypting and 
decrypting messages between two stations 700 miles apart.


By William J. Broad  June 15, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/15/science/quantum-satellites-china-spying.html

The world of artificial satellites, silent in the void of space, might seem 
quiet. In fact it’s a high-flying battlefield rife with jamming, snooping, 
blinding, spoofing, hacking and hostility among the planet’s growing array of 
spacecraft and space powers.

Now, Chinese scientists report new progress in building what appears to be the 
first unbreakable information link between an orbiting craft and its 
terrestrial controllers, raising the odds that Beijing may one day possess a 
super-secure global communications network.

In the journal Nature on Monday, the team of 24 scientists describe 
successfully testing the transmission of a “secret key” for encrypting and 
decrypting messages between a satellite and two ground stations located roughly 
700 miles apart.

The method enlists quantum entanglement ... the Chinese authors, who in 2017 
first reported on entanglement success in a satellite transmission, now show 
that they have increased its efficiency and reduced error rates enough to use 
quantum entanglement for the relay of cryptographic keys.

In a research summary, Nature said the team had demonstrated that the system 
“produces a secure channel that is resistant to attacks.”

Duncan Earl, a former scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and president 
and chief technology officer of Qubitekk, a company in Vista, Calif., that is 
exploring quantum encryption, said that the Chinese advance appeared to be 
significant.

“It’s an important milestone,” Dr. Earl said in an interview. “It’s the scaling 
of the technology that makes this so important. They’re an incredible group.”

Traditional communications satellites used radio waves to send signals. In 
contrast, the quantum communication satellite uses pairs of entangled photons, 
or light particles, whose properties remain entwined even as one photon is 
transmitted over a long distance. Messages are sent by manipulating the 
properties.

The scientist in charge of China’s quantum satellite effort is Jian-Wei Pan, 
who is the senior author on the Nature paper. He is a physicist at the 
University of Science and Technology of China, in Hefei, the capital of Anhui 
Province in east-central China.

A 2012 profile of Dr. Pan in Nature reported that he was in his early 30s when, 
in 2001, he set up China’s first laboratory for manipulating the quantum 
properties of photons. “The lucky thing was that, in 2000, the economy of China 
started to grow, so the timing was suddenly right to do good science,” Dr. Pan 
said.

In August 2016, from the Gobi Desert, China launched the world’s first 
satellite for testing the transmission of quantum information on light 
particles. The satellite was nicknamed Micius after a Chinese philosopher of 
the fifth century B.C. It fired concentrated beams of laser light to relay the 
quantum signals between two telescopes built at ground stations in Delingha and 
Nanshan, in China, 700 miles apart.

Then, in June 2017, Dr. Pan and 33 of his Chinese colleagues reported 
transmission success in the journal Science. The signal’s efficiency, they 
said, was “orders of magnitude higher than that of the bidirectional 
transmission of the two photons through telecommunications fibers,” the 
standard approach.

In the new paper, Dr. Pan’s team reported that it had increased the efficiency 
of the communications link by upgrading the telescopes and optics as well as 
the fine tracking of targets among the system’s far-flung parts.

The experimental results showed a rise in the practical security of secret-key 
transmission “to an unprecedented level,” the authors wrote.

Dr. Earl of Qubitekk said that the Chinese transmissions between Earth and 
space had previously shown much weakening from such environmental factors as 
clouds and rain. “This is progress and a significant step forward,” he said of 
the newly disclosed research.

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