Entanglement of Nanophotonic Quantum Memory Nodes in a Telecom Network

A key challenge in realizing practical quantum networks for long-distance quantum communication involves robust entanglement between quantum memory nodes connected via fiber optical infrastructure. Here, we demonstrate a two-node quantum network composed of multi-qubit registers based on silicon-vac...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2024-05
Hauptverfasser: Knaut, Can M, Suleymanzade, Aziza, Yan-Cheng, Wei, Assumpcao, Daniel R, Pieter-Jan Stas, Yan Qi Huan, Bartholomeus Machielse, Knall, Erik N, Sutula, Madison, Gefen Baranes, Sinclair, Neil, De-Eknamkul, Chawina, Levonian, David S, Bhaskar, Mihir K, Park, Hongkun, Lončar, Marko, Lukin, Mikhail D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A key challenge in realizing practical quantum networks for long-distance quantum communication involves robust entanglement between quantum memory nodes connected via fiber optical infrastructure. Here, we demonstrate a two-node quantum network composed of multi-qubit registers based on silicon-vacancy (SiV) centers in nanophotonic diamond cavities integrated with a telecommunication (telecom) fiber network. Remote entanglement is generated via the cavity-enhanced interactions between the SiV's electron spin qubits and optical photons. Serial, heralded spin-photon entangling gate operations with time-bin qubits are used for robust entanglement of separated nodes. Long-lived nuclear spin qubits are used to provide second-long entanglement storage and integrated error detection. By integrating efficient bi-directional quantum frequency conversion of photonic communication qubits to telecom frequencies (1350 nm), we demonstrate entanglement of two nuclear spin memories through 40 km spools of low-loss fiber and a 35 km long fiber loop deployed in the Boston area urban environment, representing an enabling step towards practical quantum repeaters and large-scale quantum networks.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2310.01316