Quantum breakthrough could revolutionize teleportation and computing
A long-unsolved quantum puzzle has finally been cracked, opening new possibilities for teleportation-like technologies and next-generation quantum computing.
· ScienceDaily| Source: | Kyoto University |
| Summary: | Scientists in Japan have developed a new way to instantly detect elusive quantum “W states,” a major milestone for quantum technology. The breakthrough could help unlock faster quantum communication, teleportation, and powerful new computing systems. |
Quantum entanglement is one of the strangest features of the quantum world. It describes a situation in which particles such as photons are so deeply linked that their properties cannot be fully understood one by one. Instead, the system has to be treated as a whole. That idea sharply conflicts with the classical view that every particle should carry its own independent reality, a conflict that famously troubled Einstein.
Today, entanglement is more than a philosophical puzzle. It is a key ingredient in many of the technologies researchers hope will define the future, including quantum computing, quantum communication, quantum teleportation, and quantum networks.
The Challenge of Reading Quantum States
To build those technologies, scientists need to do more than create entangled states. They also need reliable ways to tell exactly what kind of entangled state they have made.
That is where the problem becomes difficult. A standard method called quantum tomography can estimate a quantum state, but the number of measurements needed grows explosively as more photons are added. For systems made of many entangled photons, that creates a serious bottleneck.
A more powerful solution would be an entangled measurement, which can identify certain entangled states in a single shot. Scientists had already demonstrated this kind of measurement for the Greenberger Horne Zeilinger, or GHZ, state. But the W state, another major type of multi photon entanglement, had remained out of reach. Before this work, such a measurement for W states had not been proposed or experimentally demonstrated.
Scientists Target the Elusive W State
A team from Kyoto University and Hiroshima University set out to solve that missing piece. Their work led to a method for performing entangled measurements that can identify W states, with an experimental demonstration using three photons.
"More than 25 years after the initial proposal concerning the entangled measurement for GHZ states, we have finally obtained the entangled measurement for the W state as well, with genuine experimental demonstration for 3-photon W states," says corresponding author Shigeki Takeuchi.
The breakthrough came from focusing on a special feature of W states known as cyclic shift symmetry. Using that property, the researchers proposed a photonic quantum circuit that performs a quantum Fourier transformation for W states with any number of photons. In practical terms, this gave them a way to turn the hidden structure of the W state into a measurable signal.
A Stable Device Built From Light
To test the idea, the team built a device for three photons using highly stable optical quantum circuits. The system was able to run for an extended period without active control, an important feature for future quantum technologies that cannot depend on fragile, constantly adjusted laboratory setups.
The researchers inserted three single photons into the device in carefully chosen polarization states. The device then distinguished different kinds of three photon W states. Each of those states represented a specific nonclassical correlation among the three incoming photons.
The team also evaluated the fidelity of the entangled measurement. In this case, fidelity refers to the probability that the device gives the correct result when the input is a pure W state.
Why It Matters for Quantum Technology
The achievement could help advance quantum teleportation, which involves transferring quantum information rather than moving matter from place to place. It could also support new quantum communication protocols, the transfer of multi photon entangled states, and new approaches to measurement based quantum computing.
"In order to accelerate the research and development of quantum technologies, it is crucial to deepen our understanding of basic concepts to come up with innovative ideas," says Takeuchi.
The work fits into a broader push to move quantum communication and photonic quantum systems from delicate lab demonstrations toward more scalable platforms. Since the 2025 W state study, related progress has continued across the field. In late 2025, researchers demonstrated all photonic quantum teleportation using photons from distinct quantum dots in a hybrid urban network. In 2026, another team reported an integrated photonic chip capable of generating, manipulating, and measuring multipartite cluster state entanglement on a single device. These results are not direct extensions of the W state experiment, but they show why better control and measurement of complex entanglement remains so important.
Quantum networking has also been moving into real world infrastructure. In 2026, researchers tested a three node quantum network across existing fiber optic cables in New York, using entanglement swapping to connect quantum links into a small network. That kind of progress highlights the long term need for precise entangled measurements, because future quantum networks will depend on the ability to create, route, verify, and transfer fragile quantum states.
Toward Larger Quantum Systems
The Kyoto University and Hiroshima University team now plans to extend its method to larger and more general multi photon entangled states. They also aim to develop on chip photonic quantum circuits for entangled measurements.
If that effort succeeds, the ability to read complex quantum states could become faster, smaller, and more practical. For technologies built on entanglement, that would mark an important step toward systems that can move quantum information reliably through future computers and networks.