Quantum information processing (QIP) offers the promise of being able to do things that we cannot do with conventional technology. Here we present a new route for distributed optical QIP, based on generalized quantum non-demolition measurements, providing a unified approach for quantum communication and computing. Interactions between photons are generated using weak non-linearities and intense laser fields-the use of such fields provides for robust distribution of quantum information. Our approach requires only a practical set of resources, and it uses these very efficiently. Thus it promises to be extremely useful for the first quantum technologies, based on scarce resources. Furthermore, in the longer term this approach provides both options and scalability for efficient many-qubit QIP.
We describe a method to project photonic two-qubit states onto the symmetric and antisymmetric subspaces of their Hilbert space. This device utilizes an ancillary coherent state, together with a weak cross-Kerr non-linearity, generated, for example, by electromagnetically induced transparency. The symmetry analyzer is non-destructive, and works for small values of the cross-Kerr coupling. Furthermore, this device can be used to construct a non-destructive Bell state detector. 03.67.Hk, 42.50.Gy, Two-qubit measurements are an important resource in Quantum Information Processing (QIP), enabling key applications such as the teleportation of states and gate, dense coding and error correction. In particular, a measurement device that does not destroy the qubits is a very powerful tool, since it allows entanglement distillation [1] and efficient quantum computing based on measurements [2,3,4]. This is especially useful when the qubits interact weakly, and interaction-based quantum gates are hard to implement (for example, photonic qubits have negligible interaction). Furthermore, a non-destructive two-qubit measurement device can act as an deterministic source of entangled qubits.Optical QIP is of special interest, because electromagnetic fields are ideal information carriers for long distance quantum communication. Photonic quantum states generally suffer low decoherence rates compared to most massive qubit systems, but we need optical information processing devices that overcome the negligible interaction between the photons. Optical quantum computation and communication will therefore benefit greatly from non-destructive two-qubit measurements. Arguably the most important two-photon measurement is the measurement in the maximally entangled Bell basis. When the computational basis of a single-photon qubit is given by two orthogonal polarization states (H and V ), then the Bell states can be written asA non-destructive Bell measurement then projects the two photons onto one of the Bell states. This can be used in the teleportation of probabilistic gates into optical circuits [5,6], and consequently enables efficient linear optical quantum computing. In addition, a deterministic non-destructive Bell measurement would also act as a bright source of entangled photons.Braunstein and Mann presented a linear optical method to distinguish two out of the four optical Bell states [7]. In 1999, it was shown independently by Vaidman and Yoran, and Lütkenhaus et al. that the Braunstein-Mann method is optimal [8, 9]: When one is restricted to linear optics and photon counting (in-cluding feed-forward processing) at most half of the Bell states can be identified perfectly. This detection method is therefore probabilistic. Furthermore, it destroys the photons in the photon counting process, and is thus of limited use in efficient large-scale QIP.One way to improve on this scheme is to move beyond linear optics, i.e. to induce an interaction between the photons. This can be achieved using a cross-Kerr medium, i.e., a nonlinear mediu...
We present an improved phase estimation scheme employing entangled coherent states and demonstrate that these states give the smallest variance in the phase parameter in comparison to NOON, "bat," and "optimal" states under perfect and lossy conditions. As these advantages emerge for very modest particle numbers, the optical version of entangled coherent state metrology is achievable with current technology.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.