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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
On-chip quantum information processing with distinguishable photons
arXiv
Authors: Patrick Yard, Alex E. Jones, Stefano Paesani, Alexandre Maïnos, Jacob F. F. Bulmer, Anthony Laing
Year
2022
Paper ID
58368
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
182
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Multi-photon interference is at the heart of photonic quantum technologies. Arrays of integrated cavities can support bright sources of single-photons with high purity and small footprint, but the inevitable spectral distinguishability between photons generated from non-identical cavities is an obstacle to scaling. In principle, this problem can be alleviated by measuring photons with high timing resolution, which erases spectral information through the time-energy uncertainty relation. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that detection can be implemented with a temporal resolution sufficient to interfere photons detuned on the scales necessary for cavity-based integrated photon sources. By increasing the effective timing resolution of the system from 200ps to 20ps, we observe a 20% increase in the visibility of quantum interference between independent photons from integrated micro-ring resonator sources that are detuned by 6.8GHz. We go on to show how time-resolved detection of non-ideal photons can be used to improve the fidelity of an entangling operation and to mitigate the reduction of computational complexity in boson sampling experiments. These results pave the way for photonic quantum information processing with many photon sources without the need for active alignment.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2022 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Multi-photon interference is at the heart of photonic quantum technologies.
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