50 research outputs found
Time-walk and jitter correction in SNSPDs at high count rates
Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) are a leading
detector type for time correlated single photon counting, especially in the
near-infrared. When operated at high count rates, SNSPDs exhibit increased
timing jitter caused by internal device properties and features of the RF
amplification chain. Variations in RF pulse height and shape lead to variations
in the latency of timing measurements. To compensate for this, we demonstrate a
calibration method that correlates delays in detection events with the time
elapsed between pulses. The increase in jitter at high rates can be largely
canceled in software by applying corrections derived from the calibration
process. We demonstrate our method with a single-pixel tungsten silicide SNSPD
and show it decreases high count rate jitter. The technique is especially
effective at removing a long tail that appears in the instrument response
function at high count rates. At a count rate of 11.4 MCounts/s we reduce the
full width at one percent maximum level (FW1%M) by 45%. The method therefore
enables certain quantum communication protocols that are rate-limited by the
(FW1%M) metric to operate almost twice as fast. \c{opyright} 2022. All rights
reserved.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Entangled Photon Pair Source Demonstrator using the Quantum Instrumentation Control Kit System
We report the first demonstration of using the Quantum Instrumentation and
Control Kit (QICK) system on RFSoCFPGA technology to drive an entangled photon
pair source and to detect the photon signals. With the QICK system, we achieve
high levels of performance metrics including coincidence-to-accidental ratio
exceeding 150, and entanglement visibility exceeding 95%, consistent with
performance metrics achieved using conventional waveform generators. We also
demonstrate simultaneous detector readout using the digitization functional of
QICK, achieving internal system synchronization time resolution of 3.2 ps. The
work reported in this paper represents an explicit demonstration of the
feasibility for replacing commercial waveform generators and time taggers with
RFSoC-FPGA technology in the operation of a quantum network, representing a
cost reduction of more than an order of magnitude
Experimental high-dimensional entanglement certification and quantum steering with time-energy measurements
High-dimensional entanglement provides unique ways of transcending the
limitations of current approaches in quantum information processing, quantum
communications based on qubits. The generation of time-frequency qudit states
offer significantly increased quantum capacities while keeping the number of
photons constant, but pose significant challenges regarding the possible
measurements for certification of entanglement. Here, we develop a new scheme
and experimentally demonstrate the certification of 24-dimensional entanglement
and a 9-dimensional quantum steering. We then subject our photon-pairs to
dispersion conditions equivalent to the transmission through 600-km of fiber
and still certify 21-dimensional entanglement. Furthermore, we use a steering
inequality to prove 7-dimensional entanglement in a semi-device independent
manner, proving that large chromatic dispersion is not an obstacle in
distributing and certifying high-dimensional entanglement and quantum steering.
Our highly scalable scheme is based on commercial telecommunication optical
fiber components and recently developed low-jitter high-efficiency
single-photon detectors, thus opening new pathways towards advanced large-scale
quantum information processing and high-performance, noise-tolerant quantum
communications with time-energy measurementsComment: 30 pages, 4 figure
Innovative Closely Spaced Profiling and Current Velocity Measurements in the Southern Baltic Sea in 2016–2018 With Special Reference to the Bottom Layer
A solution to the problem of determination of spatial variability of oceanographic fields, which contained a fine structure resolution higher than what was possible previously using towed scanning probes, was presented for the Baltic Sea. Another concurrently solved problem consisted in obtaining data on the structure of waters in the bottom layer, which was difficult to implement by way of application of previous methods. Instead of scanning along inclined paths, a new measurement technique allows for a quasi-free probe drop with a constant sink rate and which reaches the bottom at each dive cycle along the route of the ship, independent of the pitch of the ship and optimal for the applied probe. The new measurement technique is simpler and more efficient than the previous one. In addition, the problem of measuring the velocity of both very weak and strong currents in a thin bottom layer, including stagnant zones, slopes, sills, and underwater channels, was suggested to be solved using clusters consisting of a sufficiently large number of autonomous Tilt Current Meters (TCM) of original design. The innovation benefits are illustrated by the results of a monitoring campaign that was carried out in the southern Baltic Sea in 2016–2018. Among the new findings is the highest ever recorded temperature, 14.3°C, in the halocline of the Bornholm Basin, measured after a baroclinic inflow event in early Autumn 2018, and an extraordinarily large current velocity of saltwater flow of more than 0.5 m/s, recorded by a TCM within a 1 m thick bottom layer at the eastern slope of the Hoburg Channel during a period when the northwesterly wind had intensified to a severe gale
Large active-area superconducting microwire detector array with single-photon sensitivity in the near-infrared
Superconducting nanowire single photon detectors (SNSPDs) are the
highest-performing technology for time-resolved single-photon counting from the
UV to the near-infrared. The recent discovery of single-photon sensitivity in
micrometer-scale superconducting wires is a promising pathway to explore for
large active area devices with application to dark matter searches and
fundamental physics experiments. We present 8-pixel superconducting
microwire single photon detectors (SMSPDs) with -wide wires
fabricated from WSi and MoSi films of various stoichiometries using
electron-beam and optical lithography. Devices made from all materials and
fabrication techniques show saturated internal detection efficiency at 1064 nm
in at least one pixel, and the best performing device made from silicon-rich
WSi shows single-photon sensitivity in all 8 pixels and saturated internal
detection efficiency in 6/8 pixels. This detector is the largest reported
active-area SMSPD or SNSPD with near-IR sensitivity published to date, and the
first report of an SMSPD array. By further optimizing the photolithography
techniques presented in this work, a viable pathway exists to realize larger
devices with -scale active area and beyond
Teleportation Systems Toward a Quantum Internet
Quantum teleportation is essential for many quantum information technologies, including long-distance quantum networks. Using fiber-coupled devices, including state-of-the-art low-noise superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors and off-the-shelf optics, we achieve conditional quantum teleportation of time-bin qubits at the telecommunication wavelength of 1536.5 nm. We measure teleportation fidelities of ≥90% that are consistent with an analytical model of our system, which includes realistic imperfections. To demonstrate the compatibility of our setup with deployed quantum networks, we teleport qubits over 22 km of single-mode fiber while transmitting qubits over an additional 22 km of fiber. Our systems, which are compatible with emerging solid-state quantum devices, provide a realistic foundation for a high-fidelity quantum Internet with practical devices
Teleportation Systems Toward a Quantum Internet
Quantum teleportation is essential for many quantum information technologies, including long-distance quantum networks. Using fiber-coupled devices, including state-of-the-art low-noise superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors and off-the-shelf optics, we achieve conditional quantum teleportation of time-bin qubits at the telecommunication wavelength of 1536.5 nm. We measure teleportation fidelities of ≥90% that are consistent with an analytical model of our system, which includes realistic imperfections. To demonstrate the compatibility of our setup with deployed quantum networks, we teleport qubits over 22 km of single-mode fiber while transmitting qubits over an additional 22 km of fiber. Our systems, which are compatible with emerging solid-state quantum devices, provide a realistic foundation for a high-fidelity quantum Internet with practical devices
Picosecond Synchronization of Photon Pairs through a Fiber Link between Fermilab and Argonne National Laboratories
We demonstrate a three-node quantum network for C-band photon pairs using 2
pairs of 59 km of deployed fiber between Fermi and Argonne National
Laboratories. The C-band pairs are directed to nodes using a standard
telecommunication switch and synchronized to picosecond-scale timing resolution
using a coexisting O- or L-band optical clock distribution system. We measure a
reduction of coincidence-to-accidental ratio (CAR) of the C-band pairs from 51
2 to 5.3 0.4 due to Raman scattering of the O-band clock pulses.
Despite this reduction, the CAR is nevertheless suitable for quantum networks