Deterministic Generation of All-Photonic Quantum Repeaters from Solid-State Emitters

Quantum repeaters are nodes in a quantum communication network that allow reliable transmission of entanglement over large distances. It was recently shown that highly entangled photons in so-called graph states can be used for all-photonic quantum repeaters, which require substantially fewer resour...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Donovan Buterakos, Edwin Barnes, Sophia E. Economou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2017-10-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041023
Description
Summary:Quantum repeaters are nodes in a quantum communication network that allow reliable transmission of entanglement over large distances. It was recently shown that highly entangled photons in so-called graph states can be used for all-photonic quantum repeaters, which require substantially fewer resources compared to atomic-memory-based repeaters. However, standard approaches to building multiphoton entangled states through pairwise probabilistic entanglement generation severely limit the size of the state that can be created. Here, we present a protocol for the deterministic generation of large photonic repeater states using quantum emitters such as semiconductor quantum dots and defect centers in solids. We show that arbitrarily large repeater states can be generated using only one emitter coupled to a single qubit, potentially reducing the necessary number of photon sources by many orders of magnitude. Our protocol includes a built-in redundancy, which makes it resilient to photon loss.
ISSN:2160-3308