Cisco and Qunnect build quantum network using New York fiber optic cables


FILE PHOTO: A logo of CISCO sits outside the company's house on the opening day of the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, January 20, 2025. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Cisco ⁠Systems and startup Qunnect said on Wednesday that they have built and operated ⁠a quantum network between Brooklyn and Manhattan in New York which sends ‌signals over real-world fiber optic cables and works as well as studies in labs.

The experiment,which used Brooklyn, New York-based Qunnect's hardware and Cisco's software, solved some key challenges in building such networks in existing data ​centers and cities.

Quantum computers tap quantum physics to perform calculations ⁠that would take conventional computers ⁠thousands of years, but they often require bulky cryogenic cooling equipment.

Qunnect CEO Noel Goddard said ⁠the ‌company's approach requires cryogenic cooling only at one central hub, while other data centers connected to the hub can use room-temperature equipment.

Quantum computers and networks are ⁠normally sensitive to the slightest vibration from the world around ​them, but a research ‌paper released by Cisco and Qunnect said the startup's technology - specifically devices called ⁠automatic polarization controllers - ​keeps the quantum network intact over a 17.6 kilometer (10.9 mile) stretch of fiber optic cable.

"It corrects for real-world problems," Goddard said, noting that "data centers have these tens of kilometers of fiber, ⁠and they run through all sorts of different patch ​panels, all of the things that make it look like a rat's nest."

Ramana Kompella, vice president and head of Cisco Research, called the experiment "foundational" to Cisco's goal of one day ⁠connecting quantum computers together inside a data center and then connecting those quantum data centers into a quantum internet.

In the short term, practical quantum networks could be used in fields such as trading stocks, Kompella said.

A quantum technique called "teleportation" can allow physicallyseparated computers to ​share information instantaneously, rather than taking a few milliseconds to ⁠move information at the speed of light.

"Trading computers that are tens of kilometers away, and ​they want to make a coordinated decision or a ‌stock sell or a buy, without hitting the ​speed of light limitations you typically have. Quantum entanglementnetworks can actually really help," Kompella said.

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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