6 research outputs found

    Multimode ion-photon entanglement over 101 kilometers of optical fiber

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    A three-qubit quantum network node based on trapped atomic ions is presented. The ability to establish entanglement between each of the qubits in the node and a separate photon that has travelled over a 101km-long optical fiber is demonstrated. By sending those photons through the fiber in close succession, a remote entanglement rate is achieved that is greater than when using only a single qubit in the node. Once extended to more qubits, this multimode approach can be a useful technique to boost entanglement distribution rates in future long-distance quantum networks of light and matter.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure

    Entanglement of trapped-ion qubits separated by 230 meters

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    We report on an elementary quantum network of two atomic ions separated by 230 m. The ions are trapped in different buildings and connected with 520(2) m of optical fiber. At each network node, the electronic state of an ion is entangled with the polarization state of a single cavity photon; subsequent to interference of the photons at a beamsplitter, photon detection heralds entanglement between the two ions. Fidelities of up to (88.2+2.3−6.0)%(88.2+2.3-6.0)\% are achieved with respect to a maximally entangled Bell state, with a success probability of 4×10−54 \times 10^{-5}. We analyze the routes to improve these metrics, paving the way for long-distance networks of entangled quantum processors

    Indistinguishable photons from a trapped-ion quantum network node

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    Trapped atomic ions embedded in optical cavities are a promising platform to enable long-distance quantum networks and their most far-reaching applications. Here we achieve and analyze photon in-distinguishability in a telecom-converted ion-cavity system. First, two-photon interference of cavity photons at their ion-resonant wavelength is observed and found to reach the limits set by spontaneous emission. Second, this limit is shown to be preserved after a two-step frequency conversion replicating a distributed scenario, in which the cavity photons are converted to the telecom C band and then back to the original wavelength. The achieved interference visibility and photon efficiency would allow for the distribution and practical verification of entanglement between ion-qubit registers separated by several tens of kilometers

    Entanglement of trapped-ion qubits separated by 230 meters

    No full text
    We report on an elementary quantum network of two atomic ions separated by 230 m. The ions are trapped in different buildings and connected with 520(2) m of optical fiber. At each network node, the electronic state of an ion is entangled with the polarization state of a single cavity photon; subsequent to interference of the photons at a beamsplitter, photon detection heralds entanglement between the two ions. Fidelities of up to (88.2+2.3−6.0)%(88.2+2.3-6.0)\% are achieved with respect to a maximally entangled Bell state, with a success probability of 4×10−54 \times 10^{-5}. We analyze the routes to improve these metrics, paving the way for long-distance networks of entangled quantum processors

    Entanglement of trapped-ion qubits separated by 230 meters

    No full text
    We report on an elementary quantum network of two atomic ions separated by 230 m. The ions are trapped in different buildings and connected with 520(2) m of optical fiber. At each network node, the electronic state of an ion is entangled with the polarization state of a single cavity photon; subsequent to interference of the photons at a beamsplitter, photon detection heralds entanglement between the two ions. Fidelities of up to (88.2+2.3−6.0)%(88.2+2.3-6.0)\% are achieved with respect to a maximally entangled Bell state, with a success probability of 4×10−54 \times 10^{-5}. We analyze the routes to improve these metrics, paving the way for long-distance networks of entangled quantum processors

    Entanglement of trapped-ion qubits separated by 230 meters

    No full text
    International audienceWe report on an elementary quantum network of two atomic ions separated by 230 m. The ions are trapped in different buildings and connected with 520(2) m of optical fiber. At each network node, the electronic state of an ion is entangled with the polarization state of a single cavity photon; subsequent to interference of the photons at a beamsplitter, photon detection heralds entanglement between the two ions. Fidelities of up to (88.2+2.3−6.0)%(88.2+2.3-6.0)\% are achieved with respect to a maximally entangled Bell state, with a success probability of 4×10−54 \times 10^{-5}. We analyze the routes to improve these metrics, paving the way for long-distance networks of entangled quantum processors
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