5,563 research outputs found
Boosting Linear-Optical Bell Measurement Success Probability with Pre-Detection Squeezing and Imperfect Photon-Number-Resolving Detectors
Linear optical realizations of Bell state measurement (BSM) on two
single-photon qubits succeed with probability no higher than .
However pre-detection quadrature squeezing, i.e., quantum noise limited phase
sensitive amplification, in the usual linear-optical BSM circuit, can yield
. The ability to achieve has been found to be
critical in resource-efficient realizations of linear optical quantum computing
and all-photonic quantum repeaters. Yet, the aforesaid value of is
not known to be the maximum achievable using squeezing, thereby leaving it open
whether close-to- efficient BSM might be achievable using squeezing as a
resource. In this paper, we report new insights on why squeezing-enhanced BSM
achieves . Using this, we show that the previously-reported at single-mode squeezing strength ---for unambiguous
state discrimination (USD) of all four Bell states---is an experimentally
unachievable point result, which drops to with the slightest
change in . We however show that squeezing-induced boosting of with
USD operation is still possible over a continuous range of , with an
experimentally achievable maximum occurring at , achieving . Finally, deviating from USD operation, we explore a
trade-space between , the probability with which the BSM circuit declares
a "success", versus the probability of error , the probability of an input
Bell state being erroneously identified given the circuit declares a success.
Since quantum error correction could correct for some , this tradeoff
may enable better quantum repeater designs by potentially increasing the
entanglement generation rates with exceeding what is possible with
traditionally-studied USD operation of BSMs.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
- β¦