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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Deep-Learning-Designed AlGaAs Interface Linking Trapped Ions to Telecom Quantum Networks
arXiv
Authors: I. P. De Simeone, G. Maltese, V. Cambier, J-P. Likforman, M. Ravaro, L. Guidoni, F. Baboux, S. Ducci
Year
2026
Paper ID
30914
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
197
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The realization of a scalable quantum internet requires efficient light-matter interfaces that map stationary qubits onto photonic carriers for long-distance transmission. A central challenge is the generation of entangled photons simultaneously compatible with single-emitter transitions and low-loss telecom fiber infrastructure. Spontaneous parametric down-conversion in integrated photonic platforms offers a promising route toward this goal. Among available material systems, AlGaAs is particularly attractive due to its large second-order nonlinearity and strong potential for monolithic integration. However, engineering the spectral and spatial properties of the generated quantum states requires the simultaneous optimization of numerous geometric and material parameters, a task remaining computationally demanding for conventional numerical approaches. To address this challenge and enable rapid and high-fidelity modeling of complex nonlinear photonic devices, we develop an inverse-design framework based on neural network surrogate models. Using this readily extendable method, we design a transversely pumped AlGaAs waveguide microcavity that produces polarization-entangled photon pairs in distinct spatial modes and frequency channels, one at 1092 nm, resonant with a 88Sr+ transition, and the other at 1550 nm in the telecom C-band. This device establishes a direct photonic interface between trapped-ion qubits and long-haul fiber networks, providing a scalable pathway toward hybrid quantum network architectures.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- The realization of a scalable quantum internet requires efficient light-matter interfaces that map stationary qubits onto photonic carriers for long-distance transmission.
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