Space Station Could Beam Secret Quantum Codes by 2014: Scientific American
When two particles such as photons are born from the same event, they emerge entangled, meaning they can communicate instantaneously no matter how far apart they are. Transmitting entangled pairs of photons reliably is the backbone of so-called quantum key distribution—procedures for converting those pairs into potentially unbreakable codes. Quantum cryptography, as it is known, could appeal to banks, covert government agencies and the military, and was tested in a 2007 Swiss election.
Photons can travel perhaps 100 miles (160 kilometers) or so along today’s fiber-optic cables before their quantum character breaks down. That limit vanishes aboveground.
