Although universal quantum computers ideally solve problems such as factoring integers exponentially more efficiently than classical machines, the formidable challenges in building such devices motivate the demonstration of simpler, problem-specific algorithms that still promise a quantum speedup. We constructed a quantum boson-sampling machine (QBSM) to sample the output distribution resulting from the nonclassical interference of photons in an integrated photonic circuit, a problem thought to be exponentially hard to solve classically. Unlike universal quantum computation, boson sampling merely requires indistinguishable photons, linear state evolution, and detectors. We benchmarked our QBSM with three and four photons and analyzed sources of sampling inaccuracy. Scaling up to larger devices could offer the first definitive quantum-enhanced computation.
Scalable photonic quantum technologies are based on multiple nested interferometers. To realize this architecture, integrated optical structures are needed to ensure stable, controllable, and repeatable operation. Here we show a key proof-of-principle demonstration of an externallycontrolled photonic quantum circuit based upon UV-written waveguide technology. In particular, we present non-classical interference of photon pairs in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer constructed with X couplers in an integrated optical circuit with a thermo-optic phase shifter in one of the interferometer arms.
Quantum teleportation is a fundamental concept in quantum physics [1] which now finds important applications at the heart of quantum technology including quantum relays [2,3], quantum repeaters [4] and linear optics quantum computing (LOQC) [5,6]. Photonic implementations have largely focussed on achieving long distance teleportation due to its suitability for decoherence-free communication [7][8][9]. Teleportation also plays a vital role in the scalability of photonic quantum computing [5,6], for which large linear optical networks will likely require an integrated architecture. Here we report the first demonstration of quantum teleportation in which all key parts-entanglement preparation, Bellstate analysis and quantum state tomographyare performed on a reconfigurable integrated photonic chip. We also show that a novel elementwise characterisation method is critical to mitigate component errors, a key technique which will become increasingly important as integrated circuits reach higher complexities necessary for quantum enhanced operation.Quantum teleportation is essential to many schemes for universal fault-tolerant quantum computation, making it an important protocol for any physical implementation of a quantum information processor [10,11]. In their seminal work, Knill, Laflamme, and Milburn showed that such a quantum processor could be constructed using only linear optical elements, at the expense of rendering each quantum logic gate probabilistic [5]. Adapting the teleportation scheme of Gottesman and Chuang [6], they then showed that this protocol could be efficiently scaled to a large number of concatenated gates, motivating a renewed interest in building more complex linear optical circuits for quantum information processing [11]. Realizing such a scheme requires building large, sophisticated networks of nested optical interferometers. This motivates the use of waveguides integrated onto compact and inherently stable photonic chips, and pioneering work has shown the viability of this approach for two- [12][13][14] and three-photon interference experiments [15][16][17]. These latter works highlighted the problems caused by photon loss, low data rates, and fabrication imperfections which make the extension to even higher photon numbers far from straightforward.Whilst photonic experiments were the first to realize quantum teleportation [18,19], demonstrations of this protocol in a waveguide architecture have been limited to fiber-based experiments [9,20]. Although there has been recent progress [21], no integrated photonic experiments have yet been able to demonstrate actual teleportation, due to the difficulty in realizing three photonic qubits on a sufficiently complex circuit [15]. In particular, integrated components require careful attention to fabricated deviations from design and the effects of increased and potentially unbalanced propagation loss. Experimental verification that integrated photonic circuits continue to perform well as their complexity increases is therefore of considerable interes...
Increasing the complexity of quantum photonic devices is essential for many optical information processing applications to reach a regime beyond what can be classically simulated, and integrated photonics has emerged as a leading platform for achieving this. Here we demonstrate three-photon quantum operation of an integrated device containing three coupled interferometers, eight spatial modes and many classical and nonclassical interferences. This represents a critical advance over previous complexities and the first on-chip nonclassical interference with more than two photonic inputs. We introduce a new scheme to verify quantum behaviour, using classically characterised device elements and hierarchies of photon correlation functions. We accurately predict the device's quantum behaviour and show operation inconsistent with both classical and bi-separable quantum models. Such methods for verifying multiphoton quantum behaviour are vital for achieving increased circuit complexity. Our experiment paves the way for the next generation of integrated photonic quantum simulation and computing devices.
Interference between independent single photons is perhaps the most fundamental interaction in quantum optics. It has become increasingly important as a tool for optical quantum information science, as one of the rudimentary quantum operations, together with photon detection, for generating entanglement between non-interacting particles. Despite this, demonstrations of large-scale photonic networks involving more than two independent sources of quantum light have been limited due to the difficulty in constructing large arrays of high-quality single photon sources. Here, we solve the key challenge, reporting a novel array of more than eighteen near-identical, low-loss, highpurity, heralded single photon sources achieved using spontaneous four-wave mixing (SFWM) on a silica chip. We verify source quality through a series of heralded Hong-Ou-Mandel experiments, and further report the experimental three-photon extension of the entire Hong-Ou-Mandel interference curves, which map out the interference landscape between three independent single photon sources for the first time.Recently, integration of photon pair sources on-chip has been recognized as one of the most promising approaches to scaling due to their small size, direct compatibility with integrated photonic architectures, reduction in required pump power, and potentially exquisite control of the populated optical modes [10,[21][22][23]. Unfortunately, fabrication imperfections or material limitations frequently spoil this dream. Optical loss is a key parameter for any quantum light source and on-chip sources frequently suffer from large losses due to high scattering and outcoupling mode mismatch [23][24][25]. In addition, the phase-matching conditions for the spontaneous scattering process are highly sensitive to optical dispersion. arXiv:1603.06984v1 [quant-ph]
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