487 research outputs found
Entangling ability of a beam splitter in the presence of temporal which-path information
We calculate the amount of polarization-entanglement induced by two-photon
interference at a lossless beam splitter. Entanglement and its witness are
quantified respectively by concurrence and the Bell-CHSH parameter. In the
presence of a Mandel dip, the interplay of two kinds of which-path information
-- temporal and polarization -- gives rise to the existence of entangled
polarization-states that cannot violate the Bell-CHSH inequality.Comment: 8 pages including 2 figure
Complete and Deterministic discrimination of polarization Bell state assisted by momentum entanglement
A complete and deterministic Bell state measurement was realized by a simple
linear optics experimental scheme which adopts 2-photon polarization-momentum
hyperentanglement. The scheme, which is based on the discrimination among the
single photon Bell states of the hyperentangled state, requires the adoption of
standard single photon detectors. The four polarization Bell states have been
measured with average fidelity by using the linear momentum
degree of freedom as the ancilla. The feasibility of the scheme has been
characterized as a function of the purity of momentum entanglement.Comment: 4 pages, v2, comments adde
Quantum entanglement distribution with 810 nm photons through telecom fibers
We demonstrate the distribution of polarization entangled photons of
wavelength 810 nm through standard telecom fibers. This technique allows
quantum communication protocols to be performed over established fiber
infrastructure, and makes use of the smaller and better performing setups
available around 800 nm, as compared to those which use telecom wavelengths
around 1550 nm. We examine the excitation and subsequent quenching of
higher-order spatial modes in telecom fibers up to 6 km in length, and perform
a distribution of high quality entanglement (visibility 95.6%). Finally, we
demonstrate quantum key distribution using entangled 810 nm photons over a 4.4
km long installed telecom fiber link.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Quantum computing on encrypted data
The ability to perform computations on encrypted data is a powerful tool for
protecting privacy. Recently, protocols to achieve this on classical computing
systems have been found. Here we present an efficient solution to the quantum
analogue of this problem that enables arbitrary quantum computations to be
carried out on encrypted quantum data. We prove that an untrusted server can
implement a universal set of quantum gates on encrypted quantum bits (qubits)
without learning any information about the inputs, while the client, knowing
the decryption key, can easily decrypt the results of the computation. We
experimentally demonstrate, using single photons and linear optics, the
encryption and decryption scheme on a set of gates sufficient for arbitrary
quantum computations. Because our protocol requires few extra resources
compared to other schemes it can be easily incorporated into the design of
future quantum servers. These results will play a key role in enabling the
development of secure distributed quantum systems
Practical Quantum Key Distribution with Polarization-Entangled Photons
We present an entangled-state quantum cryptography system that operated for
the first time in a real world application scenario. The full key generation
protocol was performed in real time between two distributed embedded hardware
devices, which were connected by 1.45 km of optical fiber, installed for this
experiment in the Vienna sewage system. The generated quantum key was
immediately handed over and used by a secure communication application.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Nondegenerate parametric down conversion in coherently prepared two-level atomic gas
We describe parametric down conversion process in a two-level atomic gas,
where the atoms are in a superposition state of relevant energy levels. This
superposition results in splitting of the phase matching condition into three
different conditions. Another, more important, peculiarity of the system under
discussion is the nonsaturability of amplification coefficients with increasing
pump wave intensity, under "sideband" generation conditions
Experimental delayed-choice entanglement swapping
Motivated by the question, which kind of physical interactions and processes
are needed for the production of quantum entanglement, Peres has put forward
the radical idea of delayed-choice entanglement swapping. There, entanglement
can be "produced a posteriori, after the entangled particles have been measured
and may no longer exist". In this work we report the first realization of
Peres' gedanken experiment. Using four photons, we can actively delay the
choice of measurement-implemented via a high-speed tunable bipartite state
analyzer and a quantum random number generator-on two of the photons into the
time-like future of the registration of the other two photons. This effectively
projects the two already registered photons onto one definite of two mutually
exclusive quantum states in which either the photons are entangled (quantum
correlations) or separable (classical correlations). This can also be viewed as
"quantum steering into the past"
- …