Erich Schmid Prize (2003)[1] Emmy Noether Research Award (2004) Sofja Kovalevskaja Award (2004)[1] Fresnel Prize (2005)[1] Chinese Young Scientist Prize (2006) [1] QCMC Quantum Communication Award (2012)[2] Physics World 2015 Breakthrough of the Year [3] 2015 State Natural Science Award (First Class)[4] 2017 Future Science Prize 2018 Willis E. Lamb Award for Laser Science and Quantum Optics Micius Quantum Prize (2019) ZEISS Research Award (2020)
Pan's team demonstrated five-photon entanglement in 2004.[8] Under his leadership, the world's first quantum satellite launched successfully in August 2016 as part of the Quantum Experiments at Space Scale, a Chinese research project.[9][10] In June 2017, Pan's team used their quantum satellite to demonstrate entanglement with satellite-to-ground total summed lengths between 1600km and 2400km and entanglement distribution over 1200km between receiver stations.[11]
In 2021, Pan led a team which built quantum computers. One of the devices, named "Zuchongzhi 2.1", was claimed to be one million times faster than its nearest competitor, Google's Sycamore.[12]
Awards and recognition
Pan was elected to the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2011 at the age of 41, making him one of the youngest CAS academicians.[13] He was then elected to the World Academy of Sciences in 2012 and won the International Quantum Communication Award in the same year.[14]
In April 2014, he was appointed Vice President of the University of Science and Technology of China.
His team's work on double quantum-teleportation was selected as the Physics World "Top Breakthrough of the Year" in 2015.[3] His team, whose members include Peng Chengzhi, Chen Yu'ao, Lu Chaoyang, and Chen Zengbing, won the State Natural Science Award (First Class) in 2015.[4]
In 2017, the journal Nature named Pan, along with such figures as Ann Olivarius and Scott Pruitt, one of the top 10 people who made "a significant impact in science either for good or for bad", with the label "Father of Quantum" given to Pan.[5] The same year he won the Future Science Prize.[15]
Pan was included in Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2018.[16]
^J. Yin, Y. Cao, Y.- H. Li, S.- K. Liao, L. Zhang, J.- G. Ren, W.- Q. Cai, W.- Y. Liu, B. Li, H. Dai, G.- B. Li, Q.- M. Lu, Y.- H. Gong, Y. Xu, S.- L. Li, F.- Z. Li, Y.- Y. Yin, Z.- Q. Jiang, M. Li, J.- J. Jia, G. Ren, D. He, Y.- L. Zhou, X.- X. Zhang, N. Wang, X. Chang, Z.- C. Zhu, N.- L. Liu, Y.- Ao. Chen, C.- Y. Lu, R. Shu, C.- Z. Peng, J.- Y. Wang, and J.- W. Pan "Satellite-based entanglement distribution over 1200 kilometers", Science, 356, 6343, 1140-1144, (2017) doi:10.1126/science.aan3211