Experimental quantum communication enhancement by superposing trajectories

ORAL

Abstract

In quantum communication networks, wires represent well-defined trajectories along which quantum systems are transmitted. In spite of this, trajectories can be used as a quantum control to govern the order of different noisy communication channels, and such a control has been shown to enable the transmission of information even when quantum communication protocols through well-defined trajectories fail. This result has motivated further investigations on the role of the superposition of trajectories in enhancing communication, which revealed that the use of quantum control of parallel communication channels, or of channels in series with quantum-controlled operations, can also lead to communication advantages. Building upon these findings, here we experimentally and numerically compare different ways in which two trajectories through a pair of noisy channels can be superposed. We observe that, within the framework of quantum interferometry, the use of channels in series with quantum-controlled operations generally yields the largest advantages. Our results contribute to clarify the nature of these advantages in experimental quantum-optical scenarios and showcase the benefit of treating the trajectory of the information carriers as quantum.

*We acknowledge financial support from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through BeyondC (Grant No. F7113-N38), the Templeton World Charity Foundation (Fellowship No. TWCF0194).

Publication: Experimental quantum communication enhancement by superposing trajectories. Giulia Rubino, Lee A. Rozema, Daniel Ebler, Hlér Kristjánsson, Sina Salek, Philippe Allard Guérin, Alastair A. Abbott, Cyril Branciard, Caslav Brukner, Giulio Chiribella, and Philip Walther
Phys. Rev. Research 3, 013093 (2021).

Presenters

  • Lee A Rozema

    • Univ of Vienna
    • University of Vienna

Authors

  • Lee A Rozema

    • Univ of Vienna
    • University of Vienna
  • Giulia Rubino

    • University of Vienna
  • Philip Walther

    • Univ of Vienna