$9M for exploring the fundamental limits of entangled quantum sensor networks

February 24, 2026
Written By:
Mena Davidson, U-M College of Engineering
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A new Michigan-led project aims to develop systems that reap the full benefit of quantum networks

A man in black gloves and laser safety glasses stands at a crowded optical table with various elements attached, some with wires running to them.
William Ward, a PhD student in applied physics, is building an entanglement-enhanced communication network with quantum-light sources and receivers in the Quantum Engineering Lab. The new MURI aims to explore the limits of classical sensor networks and attempt to surpass them with quantum networking. Image credit: Jero Lopera, Electrical and Computer Engineering

Quantum sensors take sensitivity and accuracy to new levels, and even higher levels of precision are possible when quantum entanglement is used to connect them.

The University of Michigan is leading a $9 million project funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research to develop methods for creating entangled networks of quantum sensors.

Entanglement is promising for high-precision networking because it links particles through their quantum states, no matter the distance between them. Measuring one particle tells you something about the other.

Zheshen Zhang
Zheshen Zhang

“Over the past few years, we discovered that entanglement can allow you to improve the performance of a sensor network in terms of the resolution—so you can actually detect finer details and take measurements faster than a conventional sensor network, with more sensitivity or higher signal-to-noise ratio,” said project leader Zheshen Zhang, U-M associate professor of electrical and computer engineering.

“We want to put these technologies in the broader context of designing the next generation of quantum technologies—using quantum computing and networking resources to boost the performance of such devices.”

The dilution refrigerator looks like a white cylinder about two feet in diameter with a silver-tone cylinder beneath. Ward, wearing black gloves, has lowered the silver cylinder by a few inches, revealing a golden disc with silver rods extending downward.
Noam Amozeg (left) and William Ward (right), PhD students in applied physics, open the dilution refrigerator in the Quantum Engineering Lab. This device will cool a quantum sensor network to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero. Image credit: Abdur-Raheem Al-Hallak, Quantum Engineering Lab

If they are successful, they could see huge improvements in measurement sensitivity, improving with the square of the number of sensors rather than the square root. The five-year effort to harness entanglement is a Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative, and it brings together experts from U-M, Princeton University, University of Chicago, University of Maryland, University of Arizona and University of Southern California.

Already, quantum sensors are connected through conventional networking such as fiber-optic connections. One of the key questions the team seeks to answer is how much additional precision can be achieved with entangled networking. What they discover could improve atomic clocks, autonomous navigation without GPS and the sensing of both magnetic fields and radiofrequency radiation.

The inside of the dilution refrigerator looks like three golden discs connected by metal rods, with a thicker cylinder of black and silver elements running down one side.
The innards of the dilution refrigerator recently installed in the Quantum Engineering Lab. This device will cool a quantum sensor network to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero. Image credit: Abdur-Raheem Al-Hallak, Quantum Engineering Lab

The team must also establish ways to maintain entanglement over time, preventing noise in the system from breaking the bonds between entangled atoms or devices. This work could help lay the groundwork for a future quantum internet.

They intend to prove out their approaches with two testbed quantum systems. One is an array of what are known as Rydberg atoms. A Rydberg atom has an electron that absorbed so much extra energy that its orbit extends far from the nucleus of the atom. Rydberg atoms are useful for sensing because the roving electron is very sensitive to both electric and magnetic fields.

Quantum entanglement can boost that sensitivity even further. Rydberg atoms take up so much space that two neighboring atoms can’t be in the Rydberg state at the same time. However, if two such atoms are hit with a laser pulse simultaneously, they can enter a quantum superposition—one atom goes Rydberg, but reality is split between which atom that is. Now, they both act like sensors and instantly react to any signal picked up by either atom.

The team is starting with an array of 25 qubits, essentially pairs of atoms, but they intend to expand it to several hundred qubits. This testbed is led by Jeff Thompson, associate professor of electrical and computing engineering at Princeton.

The dilution refrigerator looks like a white cylinder about two feet in diameter with a slightly narrower silver-tone cylinder beneath. Amozeg and Ward, wearing black gloves, are loosening the attachment points between the cylinders.
Noam Amozeg (left) and William Ward (right), PhD students in applied physics, prepare to open the dilution refrigerator in the Quantum Engineering Lab at U-M. This device will cool a quantum sensor network to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero. Image credit: Abdur-Raheem Al-Hallak, Quantum Engineering Lab

The other testbed is based on a membrane that vibrates in response to light waves like your eardrum vibrates in response to sound waves. U-M’s Zhang will lead the team upgrading a single sensor into a four-sensor system. The project will also cool the sensors to just a whisker above absolute zero (0.1 Kelvin), so cold that quantum fluctuations create more noise in the system than heat does. These sensors will be linked up with entangled light.

Using these testbeds, the team will develop quantum networking techniques including error suppression and correction.

The project is called Discrete and Continuous-Variable Distributed Entangled Quantum Sensing: Foundation, Building Blocks, and Testbeds. Additional co-PIs are Peter Seiler (University of Michigan), Alexey Gorshkov (University of Maryland), Saikat Guha (University of Maryland), Liang Jiang (University of Chicago), Dalziel Wilson (University of Arizona) and Quntao Zhang (University of Southern California).