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Photonic Quantum Computing
A paradigm for universal quantum information processing with integrated acousto-optic frequency beamsplitters
arXiv
Authors: Joseph M. Lukens, John H. Dallyn, Hsuan-Hao Lu, Noah I. Wasserbeck, Austin J. Graf, Michael Gehl, Paul S. Davids, Nils T. Otterstrom
Year
2026
Paper ID
3992
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
174
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Frequency-bin encoding offers tremendous potential in quantum photonic information processing, in which a single waveguide can support hundreds of lightpaths in a naturally phase-stable fashion. This stability, however, comes at a cost: arbitrary unitary operations can be realized by cascaded electro-optic phase modulators and pulse shapers, but require nontrivial numerical optimization for design and have thus far been limited to discrete tabletop components. In this article, we propose, formalize, and computationally evaluate a new paradigm for universal frequency-bin quantum information processing using acousto-optic scattering processes between distinct transverse modes. We show that controllable phase matching in intermodal processes enables 2times2 frequency beamsplitters and transverse-mode-dependent phase shifters, which together comprise cascadable FRequency-transverse-mODe Operations (FRODOs) that can synthesize any unitary via analytical decomposition procedures. Modeling the performance of both random gates and discrete Fourier transforms, we demonstrate the feasibility of high-fidelity quantum operations with existing integrated photonics technology, highlighting prospects of parallelizable operations achieving 100% bandwidth utilization. Our approach is realizable with CMOS technology, opening the door to scalable on-chip quantum information processing in the frequency domain.
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- This paper contributes to the Photonic Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Frequency-bin encoding offers tremendous potential in quantum photonic information processing, in which a single waveguide can support hundreds of lightpaths in a naturally...
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