4,332 research outputs found
High-quality polarization entanglement state preparation and manipulation in standard telecommunication channels
We report a novel and simple approach for generating near-perfect quality
polarization entanglement in a fully guided-wave fashion. Both deterministic
pair separation into two adjacent telecommunication channels and the paired
photons' temporal walk-off compensation are achieved using standard fiber
components. Two-photon interference experiments are performed, both for
quantitatively demonstrating the relevance of our approach, and for
manipulating the produced state between bosonic and fermionic symmetries. The
compactness, versatility, and reliability of this configuration makes it a
potential candidate for quantum communication applications.Comment: 6 figure
Beating the channel capacity limit for linear photonic superdense coding
Dense coding is arguably the protocol that launched the field of quantum
communication. Today, however, more than a decade after its initial
experimental realization, the channel capacity remains fundamentally limited as
conceived for photons using linear elements. Bob can only send to Alice three
of four potential messages owing to the impossibility of carrying out the
deterministic discrimination of all four Bell states with linear optics,
reducing the attainable channel capacity from 2 to log_2 3 \approx 1.585 bits.
However, entanglement in an extra degree of freedom enables the complete and
deterministic discrimination of all Bell states. Using pairs of photons
simultaneously entangled in spin and orbital angular momentum, we demonstrate
the quantum advantage of the ancillary entanglement. In particular, we describe
a dense-coding experiment with the largest reported channel capacity and, to
our knowledge, the first to break the conventional linear-optics threshold. Our
encoding is suited for quantum communication without alignment and satellite
communication.Comment: Letter: 6 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary Information: 4 pages, 1
figur
Near-deterministic quantum teleportation and resource-efficient quantum computation using linear optics and hybrid qubits
We propose a scheme to realize deterministic quantum teleportation using
linear optics and hybrid qubits. It enables one to efficiently perform
teleportation and universal linear-optical gate operations in a simple and
near-deterministic manner using all-optical hybrid entanglement as off-line
resources. Our analysis shows that our new approach can outperforms major
previous ones when considering both the resource requirements and fault
tolerance limits.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; extended version, title, abstract and figures
changed, details added, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Cavity-QED entangled photon source based on two truncated Rabi oscillations
We discuss a cavity-QED scheme to deterministically generate entangled
photons pairs by using a three-level atom successively coupled to two single
longitudinal mode high-Q cavities presenting polarization degeneracy. The first
cavity is prepared in a well defined Fock state with two photons with opposite
circular polarizations while the second cavity remains in the vacuum state. A
half-of-a-resonant Rabi oscillation in each cavity transfers one photon from
the first to the second cavity, leaving the photons entangled in their
polarization degree of freedom. The feasibility of this implementation and some
practical considerations are discussed for both, microwave and optical regimes.
In particular, Monte Carlo wave function simulations have been performed with
state-of-the-art parameter values to evaluate the success probability of the
cavity-QED source in producing entangled photon pairs as well as its
entanglement capability.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures; submitted for the "Optical Quantum Information
Science Special Issue" of JOSA
Teleportation-based realization of an optical quantum two-qubit entangling gate
In recent years, there has been heightened interest in quantum teleportation,
which allows for the transfer of unknown quantum states over arbitrary
distances. Quantum teleportation not only serves as an essential ingredient in
long-distance quantum communication, but also provides enabling technologies
for practical quantum computation. Of particular interest is the scheme
proposed by Gottesman and Chuang [Nature \textbf{402}, 390 (1999)], showing
that quantum gates can be implemented by teleporting qubits with the help of
some special entangled states. Therefore, the construction of a quantum
computer can be simply based on some multi-particle entangled states, Bell
state measurements and single-qubit operations. The feasibility of this scheme
relaxes experimental constraints on realizing universal quantum computation.
Using two different methods we demonstrate the smallest non-trivial module in
such a scheme---a teleportation-based quantum entangling gate for two different
photonic qubits. One uses a high-fidelity six-photon interferometer to realize
controlled-NOT gates and the other uses four-photon hyper-entanglement to
realize controlled-Phase gates. The results clearly demonstrate the working
principles and the entangling capability of the gates. Our experiment
represents an important step towards the realization of practical quantum
computers and could lead to many further applications in linear optics quantum
information processing.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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