Communication with a demountable quantum bus part 1
ORAL
Abstract
Modular networks are a promising paradigm for realizing increasingly complex quantum devices, but rapid and faithful communication between modules remains a challenge. In this work, the low-loss standing wave mode of a demountable, all-superconducting coaxial cable is used as a quantum bus in a simple quantum network consisting of two 3D cavity bosonic qubits housed in separate modules. We demonstrate several key networking requirements such as state transfer and entanglement generation with high fidelity, due to the all-superconducting nature of the bus and the absence of lossy directional elements (circulators). Crucially, we also implement bosonic quantum error correction techniques in the communication protocols to further mitigate photon loss. In particular, we achieve breakeven for the state transfer of multi-photon qubits when compared to the single-photon encoding and Bell state entanglement generation via two-photon interference with half the infidelity as the single-photon case.
*Airforce Office of Scientific Research
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Presenters
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James Teoh
- Yale University