16 research outputs found

    Implementation of a Nondeterministic Optical Noiseless Amplifier

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    International audienceQuantum mechanics imposes that any amplifier that works independently on the phase of the input signal has to introduce some excess noise. The impossibility of such a noiseless amplifier is rooted into unitarity and linearity of quantum evolution. A possible way to circumvent this limitation is to interrupt such evolution via a measurement, providing a random outcome able to herald a successful - and noiseless - amplification event. Here we show a successful realisation of such an approach; we perform a full characterization of an amplified coherent state using quantum homodyne tomography, and observe a strong heralded amplification, with about 6dB gain and a noise level significantly smaller than the minimal allowed for any ordinary phase-independent device

    A high-fidelity noiseless amplifier for quantum light states

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    Noise is the price to pay when trying to clone or amplify arbitrary quantum states. The quantum noise associated to linear phase-insensitive amplifiers can only be avoided by relaxing the requirement of a deterministic operation. Here we present the experimental realization of a probabilistic noiseless linear amplifier that is able to amplify coherent states at the highest level of effective gain and final state fidelity ever reached. Based on a sequence of photon addition and subtraction, and characterized by a significant amplification and low distortions, this high-fidelity amplification scheme may become an essential tool for quantum communications and metrology, by enhancing the discrimination between partially overlapping quantum states or by recovering the information transmitted over lossy channels.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Heralded Noiseless Amplification of a Photon Polarization Qubit

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    Non-deterministic noiseless amplification of a single mode can circumvent the unique challenges to amplifying a quantum signal, such as the no-cloning theorem, and the minimum noise cost for deterministic quantum state amplification. However, existing devices are not suitable for amplifying the fundamental optical quantum information carrier, a qubit coherently encoded across two optical modes. Here, we construct a coherent two-mode amplifier, to demonstrate the first heralded noiseless linear amplification of a qubit encoded in the polarization state of a single photon. In doing so, we increase the transmission fidelity of a realistic qubit channel by up to a factor of five. Qubit amplifiers promise to extend the range of secure quantum communication and other quantum information science and technology protocols.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Implementation of a quantum Fredkin gate using an entanglement resource

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    Photonic qubit logic provides flexible, low noise scheme for quantum information processing. However, implementation of increasing scale requires numbers of resources beyond what is readily available. A recent demonstration [1] has shown how to add a control operation to existing unitary transformations, providing a practical method for moving to medium-scale quantum circuits. Here we use the entanglement-based version of this scheme to implement a complex quantum gate - the Fredkin, or 3-qubit swap gate - with significantly less resources than its decomposition into a 2-qubit gate array

    Needling the haystack

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