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The end of stealth? New Chinese radar capable of detecting ‘invisible’ targets 100km away

Breakthrough relies on ‘spooky’ phenomenon of quantum entanglement

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A US Air Force B2 stealth bomber at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri in May 2012. Photo: AFP/US Air Force/Robert Trubia
Stephen Chenin Beijing

A top Chinese military technology company shocked physicists around the world this week when it announced it had developed a new form of radar able to detect stealth planes 100km away.

The breakthrough relies on a ghostly phenomenon known as quantum entanglement, which Albert Einstein dubbed “spooky action at a distance”.

The figure in declassified documents is usually a tuned-down version of the real [performance]
Military radar researcher

China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC), one of the “Top 10” military industry groups controlled directly by the central government, said on Sunday that the new radar system’s entangled photons had detected targets 100km away in a recent field test.

That’s five times the “potential range” of a laboratory prototype jointly developed by researchers from Canada, Germany, Britain and the United States last year.

America’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency has reportedly funded similar research and military suppliers such as Lockheed Martin are also developing quantum radar systems for combat purposes, according to media reports, but the progress of those military projects remains unknown.

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