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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Compact system development of efficient quantum-entangled photon sources towards deployable and industrial devices
arXiv
Authors: Yared G. Zena, Moritz Langer, Ahmad Rahimi, Abhishikth Dhurjati, Pavel Ruchka, Sara Jakovljevic, Mandira Pal, Frank H. P. Fitzek, Harald Giessen, Juergen Czarske, Riccardo Bassoli, Caspar Hopfmann
Year
2026
Paper ID
38870
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
168
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Entangled photon pair sources are a key enabling technology for quantum communication and networking, yet their deployment beyond laboratory environments is hindered by system-level complexity, limited operational stability, and insufficient industry compatibility. Here, we demonstrate a rack-based, mobile quantum light source architecture based on a semiconductor quantum dot emitter that directly addresses these challenges through modular system integration and automated operation. The source generates polarization-entangled photon pairs with an entanglement negativity 2n of up to 0.98(1), confirming near-maximal entanglement quality. In continuous, hands-off operation over a six-hour time window, the system achieves an average single-photon emission rate of 697(8) kHz and a maximum rate of 740(7) kHz, while maintaining 2n-value of more than 95 \%. These results are enabled by the integration of optical excitation, collection, cryogenic operation, and control electronics within a standardized rack footprint, together with automated monitoring. By demonstrating simultaneously high entanglement quality, sustained brightness, and long-term operational stability in an industry-aligned system architecture, this work advances semiconductor quantum dot sources toward deployable entangled photon sources for applied quantum photonics.
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.
- Entangled photon pair sources are a key enabling technology for quantum communication and networking, yet their deployment beyond laboratory environments is hindered by...
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