DTU ELECTRO Department of Electrical and Photonics Engineering
Nanophotonic DevicesHigh-Speed Optical Communications
Ørsteds Plads
Building 340, room 1.9.E
2800 Kgs. Lyngby
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New quantum photonic processor uses entanglement to protect itself from errors. The feat is published in Nature Physics.
Researchers at DTU Fotonik have shown that they can teleport information between two microchips by utilizing a quantum mechanical entanglement of two photons. The experiment brings us one step closer to a faster and safer Internet.
Scientists from DTU and the University of Bristol have found a promising new way to build the next generation of quantum simulators combining light and silicon micro-chips.
Senior researcher Yunhong Ding receives 2019 Villum Fonden Young Investigator funding for ”Silicon-Lithium Niobate Hybrid Integrated Quantum Photonics (QUANPIC)”
Four young DTU researchers will each receive DKK 10 million for their research. This takes place at the annual appointment of Villum Young Investigators, at which VILLUM FONDEN will award grants totalling DKK 205 million this year.
The world champions in fast data transmission use their knowledge and advanced equipment from record attempts to develop more efficient quantum cryptography.
Technologies relying on quantum mechanics are steadily becoming a bigger and bigger part of our daily lives—this includes lasers, transistors, semiconductor devices, MRI imaging systems and may others, which are often referred to as being part of the first quantum wave (or quantum revolution), ‘quantum1.0’. The next generation of quantum...
Karsten Rottwitt won a QuantERA project, SQUARE (Silicon Photonics for Quantum Fibre Networks)