21 research outputs found

    Routes Towards Optical Quantum Technology --- New Architectures and Applications

    Full text link
    This thesis is based upon the work I have done during my PhD candidature at Macquarie University. In this work we develop quantum technologies that are directed towards realising a quantum computer. Specifically, we have made many theoretical advancements in a type of quantum information processing protocol called BosonSampling. This device efficiently simulates the interaction of quantum particles called bosons, which no classical computer can efficiently simulate. In this thesis we explore quantum random walks, which are the basis of how the bosons in BosonSampling interfere with each other. We explore implementing BosonSampling using the most readily available photon source technology. We invented a completely new architecture which can implement BosonSampling in time rather than space and has since been used to make the worlds largest BosonSampling experiment ever performed. We look at variations to the traditional BosonSampling architecture by considering other quantum states of light. We show a worlds first application inspired by BosonSampling in quantum metrology where measurements may be made more accurately than with any classical method. Lastly, dealing with BosonSampling, we look at reformulating the formalism of BosonSampling using a quantum optics approach. In addition, but not related to BosonSampling, we show a protocol for efficiently generating large-photon Fock states, which are a type of quantum state of light, that are useful for quantum computation. Also, we show a method for generating a specific quantum state of light that is useful for quantum error correction --- an essential component of realising a quantum computer --- by coupling together light and atoms.Comment: PhD Thesi

    Encoding qubits into oscillators with atomic ensembles and squeezed light

    Get PDF
    The Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) encoding of a qubit within an oscillator provides a number of advantages when used in a fault-tolerant architecture for quantum computing, most notably that Gaussian operations suffice to implement all single- and two-qubit Clifford gates. The main drawback of the encoding is that the logical states themselves are challenging to produce. Here we present a method for generating optical GKP-encoded qubits by coupling an atomic ensemble to a squeezed state of light. Particular outcomes of a subsequent spin measurement of the ensemble herald successful generation of the resource state in the optical mode. We analyze the method in terms of the resources required (total spin and amount of squeezing) and the probability of success. We propose a physical implementation using a Faraday-based quantum non-demolition interaction.Comment: (v2) consistent with published version; (v1) 16 pages, 5 figure

    Scalable boson-sampling with time-bin encoding using a loop-based architecture

    Full text link
    We present an architecture for arbitrarily scalable boson-sampling using two nested fiber loops. The architecture has fixed experimental complexity, irrespective of the size of the desired interferometer, whose scale is limited only by fiber and switch loss rates. The architecture employs time-bin encoding, whereby the incident photons form a pulse train, which enters the loops. Dynamically controlled loop coupling ratios allow the construction of the arbitrary linear optics interferometers required for boson-sampling. The architecture employs only a single point of interference and may thus be easier to stabilize than other approaches. The scheme has polynomial complexity and could be realized using demonstrated present-day technologies.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure

    Sampling arbitrary photon-added or photon-subtracted squeezed states is in the same complexity class as boson sampling

    Full text link
    Boson sampling is a simple model for non-universal linear optics quantum computing using far fewer physical resources than universal schemes. An input state comprising vacuum and single photon states is fed through a Haar-random linear optics network and sampled at the output using coincidence photodetection. This problem is strongly believed to be classically hard to simulate. We show that an analogous procedure implements the same problem, using photon-added or -subtracted squeezed vacuum states (with arbitrary squeezing), where sampling at the output is performed via parity measurements. The equivalence is exact and independent of the squeezing parameter, and hence provides an entire class of new quantum states of light in the same complexity class as boson sampling.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Boson sampling with displaced single-photon Fock states versus single-photon-added coherent states---The quantum-classical divide and computational-complexity transitions in linear optics

    Full text link
    Boson sampling is a specific quantum computation, which is likely hard to implement efficiently on a classical computer. The task is to sample the output photon number distribution of a linear optical interferometric network, which is fed with single-photon Fock state inputs. A question that has been asked is if the sampling problems associated with any other input quantum states of light (other than the Fock states) to a linear optical network and suitable output detection strategies are also of similar computational complexity as boson sampling. We consider the states that differ from the Fock states by a displacement operation, namely the displaced Fock states and the photon-added coherent states. It is easy to show that the sampling problem associated with displaced single-photon Fock states and a displaced photon number detection scheme is in the same complexity class as boson sampling for all values of displacement. On the other hand, we show that the sampling problem associated with single-photon-added coherent states and the same displaced photon number detection scheme demonstrates a computational complexity transition. It transitions from being just as hard as boson sampling when the input coherent amplitudes are sufficiently small, to a classically simulatable problem in the limit of large coherent amplitudes.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; published versio
    corecore