Los Alamos National 
LaboratoryGo to 
the Lab's 
home pageSearch for people 
in the 
Lab's directorySearch the Laboratory's Web site
 News and Public Affairs  News Releases
Site MapNewsJobsMapsLibrarySearch
   News Releases
 

by Subject
by Organization
by Year

  Publications
  Press Kit
  Other News Sources
  Contacts
     

Los Alamos quantum cryptography team is co-winner of prestigious European research prize

Contact: Jim Danneskiold, jdanneskiold@lanl.gov, (505) 667-1640 (04-095)


    

Recent News

* Los Alamos scientist named Asian American Engineer of the Year

* Los Alamos scientist featured in NASA science update

* Los Alamos muon detector could thwart nuclear smugglers

* Wojciech H. Zurek named Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar

* Four Los Alamos physicists honored by American Physical Society

* Los Alamos National Laboratory organizations earn seven out of 13 NNSA Pollution Prevention awards

* Carter Hydrick returns to the Bradbury Science Museum Feb. 15

* Laboratory supports summer science program

* New NASA IBEX mission to carry Los Alamos instrument

* Beason takes top threat reduction post at Los Alamos

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Dec. 7, 2004 -- Los Alamos researchers and other members of a multi-nation collaboration that is developing a revolutionary technology for information security have captured half of the European Union's Descartes Prize for Research.

Los Alamos' quantum cryptography team and six other institutions in the Information Society Technologies (IST) QuComm collaboration received the prize for their project to build a secure global communication system using particles of light.

Quantum cryptography makes a more secure global infrastructure possible by enabling two parties to encode a secret key with single photons so they can communicate much more securely than with other cryptographic techniques. Once the quantum key is encoded through polarization, any attempt by a third party to eavesdrop on the communications is easily detected. Among potential applications for quantum cryptography include nearly all forms of electronic communications, and electronic banking and voting.

The QuComm partnership will split the one-million-Euro prize (about $1.3 million) with a team of life scientists studying mitochondrial DNA, whose research might someday lead to therapies to slow the aging process. The prizes, now in their fifth year, were awarded in Prague, Czechoslovakia, last week by Janez Potocnik, EU commissioner for science and research.

"The idea behind our collaboration was to take quantum encryption out of the laboratory and show that that you can do something useful with it," said Richard Hughes of Los Alamos' Physics Division, who leads the Laboratory's quantum cryptography projects.

"These days the ability to ensure privacy is immensely important, and obviously the jury thought that our work was significant for business, government and eventually for the average computer user," Hughes said. "The prize is awarded specifically for things that will have a major impact on improving society, so we were very pleased to win competing against projects in the biosciences, nanotechnology, chemistry and other equally important fields."

The IST-QuComm collaboration is made up of research groups in Sweden, Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria and the United Kingdom, in addition to the Los Alamos team.

Progress in quantum cryptography and related areas has been rapid in recent years. A key breakthrough came two years ago, when Los Alamos researchers sent an encrypted quantum key nearly six miles from the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center to the Pajarito Ski Area, still the only demonstration of quantum key distribution through the atmosphere in daylight.

Last year, IST-QuComm physicists at the University of Vienna succeeded in sending encrypted photons more than one-third of a mile across the river Danube, while a group at the University of Geneva recently demonstrated quantum teleportation at wavelengths used in telecommunications through a 2-1/2 mile fiber-optic cable. The IST-QuComm consortium also performed the first-ever bank transfer guaranteed by quantum technologies over a 3.7-mile fiber-optic cable in Vienna this summer. Four years ago, the Los Alamos team made headlines when it sent encrypted photons through 30 miles of fiber-optic cable across the Laboratory grounds.

A high-profile jury from the fields of science industry and government selected the two winning collaborations for the Descartes Prize from among eight finalists, representing the entire spectrum of science and technology disciplines. Jury chair was Ene Ergma, vice president of the Academy of Sciences of Estonia and president of the Estonian parliament.

More information about the Los Alamos team and the Quantum Institute is available at http://quantum.lanl.gov/hughes.shtml online.

Information about the collaboration is available at http://www.imit.kth.se/QEO/qucomm/index.html online.

Los Alamos National Laboratory is operated by the University of California for the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) of the U.S. Department of Energy and works in partnership with NNSA's Sandia and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories to support NNSA in its mission.

Los Alamos develops and applies science and technology to ensure the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear deterrent; reduce the threat of weapons of mass destruction, proliferation and terrorism; and solve national problems in defense, energy, environment and infrastructure.


Additional news releases related to Physics

Additional news releases from the Physics (P) Division

       
       
 Los Alamos National Laboratory
Operated by the Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's
NNSA   
Inside
| © Copyright 2007-8 Los Alamos National Security, LLC All rights reserved | Disclaimer/Privacy

Last Modified: Monday, 28-Feb-2005 12:39:03 MST
www-news@lanl.gov