Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures

In this paper we propose a technique for distributing entanglement in architectures in which interactions between pairs of qubits are constrained to a fixed network $G$. This allows for two-qubit operations to be performed between qubits which are remote from each other in $G$, through gate teleport...

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Main Authors: Niel de Beaudrap, Steven Herbert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften 2020-11-01
Series:Quantum
Online Access:https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2020-11-01-356/pdf/
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spelling doaj-0c2e2970ba83401a81d688676530c65e2020-11-25T03:57:09ZengVerein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den QuantenwissenschaftenQuantum2521-327X2020-11-01435610.22331/q-2020-11-01-35610.22331/q-2020-11-01-356Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architecturesNiel de BeaudrapSteven HerbertIn this paper we propose a technique for distributing entanglement in architectures in which interactions between pairs of qubits are constrained to a fixed network $G$. This allows for two-qubit operations to be performed between qubits which are remote from each other in $G$, through gate teleportation. We demonstrate how adapting $\textit{quantum linear network coding}$ to this problem of entanglement distribution in a network of qubits can be used to solve the problem of distributing Bell states and GHZ states in parallel, when bottlenecks in $G$ would otherwise force such entangled states to be distributed sequentially. In particular, we show that by reduction to classical network coding protocols for the $k$-pairs problem or multiple multicast problem in a fixed network $G$, one can distribute entanglement between the transmitters and receivers with a Clifford circuit whose quantum depth is some (typically small and easily computed) constant, which does not depend on the size of $G$, however remote the transmitters and receivers are, or the number of transmitters and receivers. These results also generalise straightforwardly to qudits of any prime dimension. We demonstrate our results using a specialised formalism, distinct from and more efficient than the stabiliser formalism, which is likely to be helpful to reason about and prototype such quantum linear network coding circuits.https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2020-11-01-356/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niel de Beaudrap
Steven Herbert
spellingShingle Niel de Beaudrap
Steven Herbert
Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
Quantum
author_facet Niel de Beaudrap
Steven Herbert
author_sort Niel de Beaudrap
title Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
title_short Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
title_full Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
title_fullStr Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
title_full_unstemmed Quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
title_sort quantum linear network coding for entanglement distribution in restricted architectures
publisher Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften
series Quantum
issn 2521-327X
publishDate 2020-11-01
description In this paper we propose a technique for distributing entanglement in architectures in which interactions between pairs of qubits are constrained to a fixed network $G$. This allows for two-qubit operations to be performed between qubits which are remote from each other in $G$, through gate teleportation. We demonstrate how adapting $\textit{quantum linear network coding}$ to this problem of entanglement distribution in a network of qubits can be used to solve the problem of distributing Bell states and GHZ states in parallel, when bottlenecks in $G$ would otherwise force such entangled states to be distributed sequentially. In particular, we show that by reduction to classical network coding protocols for the $k$-pairs problem or multiple multicast problem in a fixed network $G$, one can distribute entanglement between the transmitters and receivers with a Clifford circuit whose quantum depth is some (typically small and easily computed) constant, which does not depend on the size of $G$, however remote the transmitters and receivers are, or the number of transmitters and receivers. These results also generalise straightforwardly to qudits of any prime dimension. We demonstrate our results using a specialised formalism, distinct from and more efficient than the stabiliser formalism, which is likely to be helpful to reason about and prototype such quantum linear network coding circuits.
url https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2020-11-01-356/pdf/
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