
China creates hacker-proof quantum satellite communication link with South Africa
China has for the first time extended ultra-secure communication into the southern hemisphere using a quantum key distribution link with South Africa, according to a senior scientist involved in the project.
Advertisement
The achievement brings the world a step closer to an intercontinental communication service that would render hacking of financial, national defence or other communications nearly impossible.
Yin Juan, a deputy from the National People's Congress (NPC), and a professor of experimental physics at the University of Science and Technology of China, made the announcement during the NPC's annual plenary meeting this week in Beijing.
The first quantum demonstration spanning 12,800km (7,954 miles) between Beijing and South Africa was made possible with the help of China's quantum communication satellites, Yin said.
'It is also the first time this kind of secure quantum key distribution experiment has been implemented in the southern hemisphere,' added Yin, who was a chief payload designer for the world's first quantum communication satellite, Mozi – also known as Micius – which launched in 2016 to begin long-distance quantum transmissions.
A model at Anhui Innovation Centre displaying the space-based quantum technology China has used to establish ultra-secure communication. Photo: Xinhua
In 2017, scientists used the satellite to make a secure 'quantum call' and send images between China and Austria over a distance of 7,600km.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
31-05-2025
- South China Morning Post
China's quantum satellite can be hacked, Singapore-based scientist warns
China 's quantum satellite could potentially be hacked due to tiny delays between its onboard lasers that could be exploited by eavesdroppers in an attack, a former Russia -based quantum researcher who is now working in Singapore has warned. Advertisement The tiny delays could provide 'ample opportunities' to hack Micius, the world's first quantum satellite , whose performance is key to expanding China's quantum communication network. Quantum communication is a form of information transfer that relies on quantum physics-based cryptography to encode data in single light particles called photons. Quantum key distribution (QKD) is one method that relies on exchanging secret keys between two parties used to decrypt the information, which makes it difficult for eavesdroppers to listen in and is theoretically unhackable. 'However, it is widely known that realistic QKD devices can be vulnerable to various types of side-channel attacks that rely on flaws in experimental implementation,' said quantum researcher Alexander Miller in a non-peer-reviewed paper submitted online on May 10. Advertisement After analysing data obtained during communication between a ground station and Micius, Miller found time delays between the lasers on the quantum transmitter on board, which showed that the 'distribution of quantum keys from Micius was insecure'.


South China Morning Post
27-04-2025
- South China Morning Post
How the list of China-born leaders in global science is steadily growing
Geophysicist Zhigang Peng has been voted in as the next president-elect of the Seismological Society of America in Baltimore, making him the first Chinese -American to hold the position in the organisation's 118-year history. Advertisement A long-time professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology and graduate of the University of Science and Technology of China, Peng was elected at last week's annual meeting of the society and is set to assume the presidency in 2026. His election reflects a slow but growing trend toward greater representation of China-born scientists in the leadership of US academic societies – roles in which they have long been under-represented despite their substantial contributions to research and education 'There have been some improvements, but still limited,' Yi Rao, a neurobiologist at Peking University, said. Peng is not alone in pushing boundaries. This July, virologist Shan-Lu Liu of Ohio State University will become the first Chinese-American to lead the American Society for Virology since its founding more than four decades ago. Advertisement 'I hope to see more Chinese-American researchers take on leadership roles, expand their impact beyond their own science and better serve the broader community,' Liu said. As these milestones accumulate, the South China Morning Post takes a closer look at those scientists of Chinese descent who have recently been elected to – or served as – presidents of academic societies in the US.


RTHK
25-04-2025
- RTHK
Lee's mainland tech drive 'making HK more synched up'
Lee's mainland tech drive 'making HK more synched up' John Lee's visit to Zhejiang is significant given that it contributes 10 percent of China's GDP and is home to 'Six Little Dragons'. Photo: John Lee's Facebook A Hong Kong deputy to the National People's Congress said on Friday mainland technology firms can show the world what they have achieved through the SAR. Speaking on RTHK's Backchat programme, Nicholas Chan said Chief Executive John Lee's visit to Zhejiang is significant as the province accounts for nearly 10 percent of China's gross domestic product. Chan also believed there will be closer cooperation between the SAR and Zhejiang now that a memorandum of understanding has been signed for 51 projects that cover 13 key areas like smart cities, artificial intelligence, fintech and biotech. He also believed that Hangzhou's "Six Little Dragons" – DeepSeek, Game Science, Unitree Robotics, Deep Robotics, BrainCo and Manycore Tech – can raise funds globally via Hong Kong, citing the SAR's role as a 'super connector' and 'super value-adder'. 'You look at what's happening there in our government plan for the coming year," Chan said. "It is about how we develop technology and industries together in a synchronized way so that you don't have technology that is just built for interest but which no one uses, and industries dying for some technology that doesn't exist. 'We will be more synced up, more joined up, and we'll be able to unleash more power, particularly in these testing geopolitical times,' he added. Chan said Hong Kong is an ideal location for companies to demonstrate robotics technology to the world as countries like the United States have a strong belief in Hong Kong's compliance law. 'And so if we can build this, demonstrate to the world through Hong Kong, then these technologies would have a stronger reach throughout the world and be able to improve lives generally throughout the world,' he said. Speaking on the same programme, artificial intelligence consultant Raj Shroff said Hong Kong, as an international city, is also attractive for high-tech firms, as the companies can attract foreign capital and customers into the SAR, while the city's universities also bring in a lot of talent locally and from around the world. Hong Kong, he said, has laid out a welcome mat for tech firms to operate here and the talent acquisition and sharing would make the SAR a larger technology hub.