Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

Quantum light beams good for fast technology

24 August 2007

Australian and French scientists have made another breakthrough in the technology that will drive next generation computers and teleportation.

The researchers have successfully superposed light beams, which produces a state that appears to be both on and off at once.

Light beams that are simultaneously on and off are vital for the next-generation super computers which should be faster than current computers based on bits, that are either on or off.

Previously, only smaller light particles had been superposed and the group has also proved a quantum physics theory known as Schrödinger’s cat.

This theory, named after an Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger, proposed that a large object such as a cat could be simultaneously alive and dead.

Researchers from The University of Queensland and Laboratory Charles Fabry of the Institute of Optics in France, have published the latest breakthrough in the international journal NATURE.

UQ Centre for Quantum Computer Technology researcher Dr Hyunseok Jeong devised the scheme to generate and superpose the beams which was tested and proved by his French collaborators.

Dr Jeong said his group used special lasers, crystals, photon detectors, half-mirrors and other optical devices to generate and measure the superposition of light beams.

“It has been known to be extremely hard to generate Schrödinger cat states, particularly with traveling light,” Dr Jeong said.

“Even though one could generate such Schrodinger cat states, it would be extremely hard to observe them because in a very short time, they would be reduced to either alive or dead states.”

He said his group’s research findings would help speed up the development of quantum information technologies such as quantum computers, quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.

“Using Schrödinger cat states, quantum teleportation may be performed with nearly 100 percent success
probability.”

MEDIA: Dr Jeong (0420 818 138, +61 7 3346 9728) or Miguel Holland at UQ Communications (+61 7 3365 2619)

Related articles

Illustration of globe encircled by rows of people

World’s burden of mental disorders doubled since 1990

Mental disorders are now the leading cause of disability globally, overtaking cancer and cardiovascular disease, new research has found.
22 May 2026
Two people sitting on a couch in a bright living room surrounded by moving boxes, with one holding a hand up mid-gesture, indicating a recent move or unpacking scene.
Analysis

This little‑known scheme can help first home buyers save thousands more for a deposit, with less tax

Saving for a first home is already hard enough. So when a federal budget change appears to make some popular savings strategies less attractive, it is no surprise people are worried.
21 May 2026

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.