4 research outputs found
A Hybrid Long-Distance Entanglement Distribution Protocol
We propose a hybrid (continuous-discrete variable) quantum repeater protocol
for distribution of entanglement over long distances. Starting from entangled
states created by means of single-photon detection, we show how entangled
coherent state superpositions, also known as `Schr\"odinger cat states', can be
generated by means of homodyne detection of light. We show that
near-deterministic entanglement swapping with such states is possible using
only linear optics and homodyne detectors, and we evaluate the performance of
our protocol combining these elements.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Nondiffracting beams for vortex tomography
We propose a reconstruction of vortex beams based on the implementation of
quadratic transformations in the orbital angular momentum. The information is
encoded in a superposition of Bessel-like nondiffracting beams. The measurement
of the angular probability distribution at different positions allows for the
reconstruction of the Wigner function.Comment: 3 pages. 2 eps figures. To appear in Optics Letter
Amplification of realistic Schrödinger-cat-state-like states by homodyne heralding
We present a scheme for the amplification of Schrodinger cats that collapses
two smaller states onto their constructive interference via a homodyne
projection. We analyze the performance of the amplification in terms of
fidelity and success rate when the input consists of either exact coherent
state superpositions or of photon-subtracted squeezed vacua. The impact of
imprecise homodyne detection and of impure squeezing is quantified. We also
assess the scalability of iterated amplifications.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figure
Anything but qubits
<p>Poster presented at the Photons Beyond Qubits workshop in Olomouc, April 2013.</p>
<p>Three topics are briefly covered: </p>
<p> * Cat state amplification by conditional homodyning</p>
<p> * Displacement-enhanced entanglement distillation</p>
<p> * Towards an efficient single photon source with NV centres in an open microcavity</p>
<p>The first two are theoretical schemes for quantum information processing with squeezed and cat states, published in Physical Review A 87, 043826 (2013) and Optics Express 21, 6670-6680 (2013), respectively.</p>
<p>The third subject is our current experimental work on creating micron-sized optical resonators with fibres, particularly for the purpose of interfacing with nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond nanocrystals.</p