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New Findings Reveal a Groundbreaking Creation That Redefines Our Understanding of Chance
ETH Zurich researchers led by Renato Renner built a “perfect die” by entangling two qubits linked through a 30-meter tunnel with microwave photons, then refining the output with a two-source extractor. The Nature-published experiment yields random numbers whose unpredictability is certified by physics, pointing to applications in cryptography and gaming that classical generators cannot match.
Inside a 30-meter tunnel in Zurich, two qubits traded microwave whispers and out came numbers no machine could second-guess. An ETH Zurich team led by Renato Renner used entanglement and a two-source extractor to mint a stream of randomness that is certified by physics, not by assumptions about hardware. The result slices into the old comfort of determinism while pointing straight at practical stakes like cryptography and lottery systems. Published in Nature, the work argues that unpredictability is not a bug of measurement but a built-in feature of reality.
Shaking up randomness: How quantum physics challenges determinism
Daily life feels predictable, but quantum physics keeps pulling the rug. At the smallest scales, outcomes refuse to be pinned down, and that uncertainty is not a bug of our instruments, it is how nature behaves. Scientists have long asked if that irreducible chaos can be harvested to produce pure randomness. Researchers at ETH Zurich now say yes, and their evidence is striking.
The ETH Zurich experiment: A first-of-its-kind perfect die
Led by cryptographer Renato Renner, the team built what they call a “perfect die,” a system that outputs bits no one can predict, not even its creators. The setup used quantum entanglement between 2 qubits linked by microwave photons across roughly 98 feet. Measurements on one qubit correlated with the other, but individual outcomes remained fundamentally unknowable.
Raw results from those measurements were then processed with a “two-source extractor,” a technique that purifies weakly random inputs into provably random outputs. The claim rests on physics, not on trusting the device’s internals. In other words, the randomness is certified by the experiment’s structure and quantum theory itself. The work appears in Nature, and it leans on decades of Bell test research that rules out hidden classical variables.
Applications and quantum advantage
This approach differs from typical generators that rely on algorithms or messy environmental noise. Here, the output is anchored to the laws of quantum mechanics. The immediate target is cryptography, where key security lives or dies on unpredictability. Banks, cloud providers, and hardware security modules could feed these certified bits into key generation, secure boot, and high-stakes authentication.
Gaming and lotteries are obvious candidates too, though scaling and cost will decide the pace. The researchers also frame the result as evidence of quantum advantage, a domain where classical machines cannot match the guarantee. For developers and CISOs, the practical message is simple: physics-backed entropy can raise the floor under security architectures that still depend on pseudo-random seeds.
A philosophical question: Chaos at the heart of the universe
Beyond tools and protocols, the result nudges a long-running debate. If certain outputs are provably beyond prediction, then indeterminacy is not just ignorance, it is baked into reality. That supports the probabilistic view of quantum mechanics and narrows the room for hidden-determinist explanations. It also reframes risk models: some uncertainty cannot be averaged away, only respected and, as shown here, harnessed.