Physicists Solve Major Challenge in Quantum Synchronization

Physicists Solve Major Challenge in Quantum Synchronization

In This Article

Article Contents

Artistic Representation of Nonreciprocal Quantum Synchronization
An artistic representation of nonreciprocal quantum synchronization. RIKEN researchers have proposed a novel approach for the nonreciprocal quantum synchronization of phonons that is resilient against imperfections and noise. Credit: 2026 RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing

A theoretical study shows how nonreciprocal quantum synchronization could be achieved in real-world systems.

Three theoretical physicists at RIKEN have proposed a new way to achieve one-way quantum synchronization in phonons. The method is designed to remain stable even when real-world obstacles, including fabrication flaws and environmental noise, would normally disrupt delicate quantum effects.

Many technologies rely on components that work like one-way routes, letting particles or signals move easily in one direction while strongly limiting movement in the opposite direction. These nonreciprocal components are already important in microwave and optical systems, where they help guide signals and reduce unwanted reflections.

“Nonreciprocal components enable signals to travel along desired paths, whereas they are strongly attenuated in the opposite direction,” notes Franco Nori of the RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing (RQC). “This ability finds applications ranging from signal processing to invisible cloaking.”

One-way behavior reaches quantum systems

A major goal for physicists is to create nonreciprocal quantum synchronization in the laboratory. In this effect, two quantum systems synchronize in one direction, but the same synchronized behavior does not occur in reverse.

Turning that idea into a practical system has been difficult. Earlier proposed approaches faced several limitations that would make them hard to use under real experimental conditions.

“Practical quantum technologies face critical challenges from random fabrication imperfections and environmental noise,” notes Adam Miranowicz, also of RQC. “These factors profoundly suppress—or even completely destroy—quantum resources in conventional approaches.”

Franco Nori, Adam Miranowicz, Deng Gao Lai, and Their Team
Franco Nori (first row, second from the right), Adam Miranowicz (first row, first on the left), Deng-Gao Lai (second row, first on the left), and their team, as well as many visiting researchers, at the RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing. Credit: 2026 RIKEN

A sturdier route to synchronization

In a theoretical study, Nori, Miranowicz, and Deng-Gao Lai have now proposed a way to produce nonreciprocal quantum synchronization in phonons, the sound-related particles that carry vibrations. Their approach is designed to avoid the practical weaknesses that affected earlier schemes.

“This development establishes a new foundation for generating fragile-to-robust nonreciprocal quantum resources with future practical applicability,” says Nori.

The proposed method combines two separate quantum effects that work together. It causes phonons to synchronize when light or a magnetic field is applied from one direction, but prevents the same synchronization when the input comes from the opposite direction.

The strength of the effect surprised the three physicists. “We were thrilled to discover that quantum synchronization persists even in the presence of substantial imperfections and noise,” says Lai. “Previously, this was thought to be impossible without employing complex protection schemes.”

Toward sturdier quantum devices

Nori, Miranowicz, and Lai say the work could help create more practical quantum technologies and plan to continue developing the idea.

“By enabling robust nonreciprocal quantum synchronization, our research paves the way for realizing more reliable quantum processors and protected quantum resources,” comments Lai. “We’re now planning to explore applications in quantum networking and error-resilient quantum information processing.”

Reference: “Nonreciprocal quantum synchronization” by Deng-Gao Lai, Adam Miranowicz, and Franco Nori, 26 September 2025, Nature Communications.
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-63408-z

Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
Follow us on Google and Google News.

Full article can be found at: https://scitechdaily.com/physicists-solve-major-challenge-in-quantum-synchronization/

Key Terms

SciTechDaily offers the best intelligent, informed science and technology coverage and analysis you can find on a daily basis, sourcing a huge range of great writers and excellent research institutes. It was founded in 1998 by Vicki Hyde, a friend of Denis Dutton (of Arts & Letters Daily fame) and was essentially a sister site to ALDaily.com. The idea was to link to the most thought-provoking, well researched online items in the world of science and technology. (Originally, this site was known as SciTech Daily Review, but it was simplified to SciTechDaily in 2011. The address has always remained SciTechDaily.com.)