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summary
On October 4
, 2022, the Nobel Prize in Physics was decided as follows:
Alain Aspe
 Paris Sakurai University and École Polytechnique, Palaiseau, France
John Crowther
 J.F. Crowther & Associates, Walnut Creek, California, USA
Anton Seillinger
 Austria, University of Vienna

They conducted
 groundbreaking experiments on "quantum entanglement" and their results paved the way from theory to technology.
History and background of "quantum entanglement"
The inexplicable effects of quantum mechanics are beginning to be applied. 
There are large research areas such as
 quantum computers, quantum networks, and secure quantum cryptographic communications.
One of the key factors in these developments is that quantum mechanics has made it possible for two or more particles to exist in
 a tangled state.
In quantum mechanics, two or more particles
 can exist as a "tangled" state.
For a long time,
 there was a question of whether this correlation was due to the fact that the entangled pairs of particles contained hidden variables –
 instructions that dictate what results should be obtained in the experiment.
In the 1960s,
 John Stewart Bell developed the mathematical inequality that bears his name. 
It's called Bell's inequality. 
This means that if there is a hidden variable, the correlation of a large number of measurement results will not exceed a certain value.
achievement
John Crowther

John Crowther
 developed
 John Bell's ideas and connected them to practical experiments.
Specifically, using calcium atoms that can
 emit intertwined photons when irradiated with special light,
 filters were installed on the left and right sides to
 measure the polarization of photons.
When he measured, it 
clearly broke Bell's inequality and supported quantum mechanics.
This means that quantum mechanics will not replace theories
 that use hidden variables.
Alan Aspe

Even after John Crowther's experiments, some theoretical flaws
 remained.
As a way to close defects, Alan Aspe 
developed a device that could switch measurement settings after entangled pairs had moved away from the source,
 demonstrating that the settings
 that existed when the pairs were emitted did not affect the measurement results.
Specifically, they used a new method of exciting atoms to emit intertwined photons at a faster rate,
 and
 also succeeded in switching to a different setting.
Anton Seillinger

Anton Seillinger
 set out to exploit the entanglement of quantum states through
 sophisticated tools and long experiments.
In particular, his research group 
demonstrated a phenomenon called quantum teleportation, which allows quantum states to be remotely controlled from one particle to another.
Specifically, a laser was irradiated on a special crystal to create
 entangled pairs of photons, and the measurement settings were shifted using random numbers,
 and the measurement settings were changed using random numbers. In one experiment, signals from distant galaxies were used to control filters and control them so that the signals did not affect each other.
Click here for more specific scientific background
How entanglement has become a powerful tool
For experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of Bell inequalities and pioneering quantum information science
