Those photonic qubits can be transmitted over existing fiber-optic hardware, which would eliminate much of the cost of installing new infrastructure. That kind of portability could help lead to a more stable and secure quantum internet.
The process of generating and encoding those qubits remains expensive and time-consuming, but integrated quantum photonics such as those deployed on the team’s new chip could help overcome that obstacle.
“If we can mass produce a chip that has all the components we need to generate the necessary polarization entanglement, then it becomes a matter of plugging the chips into a network without having to buy and align all these specialized tabletop components,” said Alexander Miloshevsky, an ORNL postdoctoral research associate and co-author of the study.
The chip design incorporates key components such as a microring resonator, which allows entangled photon pairs to be generated, and polarization splitter-rotators, which separate the input light into different output paths depending on the light’s polarization. Pairing the components on a single chip enables direct generation of broadband polarization entanglement.
“These photons are compatible with the traditional fiber-optic cable networks that already exist,” said Hsuan-Hao Lu, an ORNL quantum research scientist and co-author of the study. “Once we can generate and manipulate these photons, we can use everyday, off-the-shelf telecom components for much of the work that’s left.”
The chip demonstrated more than 116 distinct pairs of channels, or colors of light waves, for transmission. More than 100 of those channels had a high fidelity – what the team described as a “record number.”
By using microring resonators for pair generation, the team’s design could ultimately enable the creation of hyperentangled qubits, which would be entangled in more than one way, such as by polarization and by color.
“The more degrees of freedom we can use to entangle and encode these qubits, the more information we can potentially pack in,” Lukens said. “One rough metaphor for entanglement is a pair of multifaceted dice that, although individually rolling completely random results, always match. When multiple degrees of freedom — color, polarization and so on — are entangled, it’s like having access to several pairs of these dice at once, each of which can be used for communication. That’s hyperentanglement.
“All of these studies are pieces of a larger picture that eventually gets us to a quantum internet. We don’t know exactly what the final result will look like, but everything we learn gets us a little closer.”
Support for this research came from DOE’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research program, from the National Science Foundation and from the Air Force Research Laboratory.
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This Oak Ridge National Laboratory news article "ORNL entanglement study connects quantum essentials on new chip" was originally found on https://www.ornl.gov/news