Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session M53: Quantum Communication
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, March 6, 2024
Room: 202AB
Sponsoring
Unit:
DQI
Chair: Shraddha Singh, Yale University
Abstract: M53.00011 : Deterministic generation of two-dimensional cluster states of itinerant microwave photonic qubits, part 2: characterization.
10:24 AM–10:36 AM
Presenter:
Aleksandr Grigorev
(ETH Zurich)
Authors:
Aleksandr Grigorev
(ETH Zurich)
James O'Sullivan
(ETH Zurich)
Kevin Reuer
(ETH Zurich)
Alonso Hernandez Anton
(ETH Zurich)
Xi Dai
(ETH Zurich)
Christoph Hellings
(ETH Zurich)
Graham J Norris
(ETH Zurich)
Alexander Flasby
(ETH Zurich)
Dante Colao Zanuz
(ETH Zurich)
Daniel Malz
(Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics)
Jean-Claude Besse
(ETH Zurich)
Christopher Eichler
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg (FAU))
Andreas Wallraff
(ETH Zurich)
Multidimensional tensor-network states, in particular cluster states, are a key resource for quantum communication, measurement-based quantum computing and quantum metrology. While the generation of such states has been demonstrated using continuous-variable encoding, deterministic protocols with discrete-variable encoding remain limited to only a few entangled photonic qubits. Here, we develop a protocol for generating and characterizing large-scale entangled two-dimensional cluster states of such qubits. We utilize a source of two-dimensional entangled microwave photons consisting of a pair of superconducting transmon qubits and a set of tunable couplers, enabling control of both qubit-qubit interactions and emission into a common waveguide. We calculate statistical moments of the measured photon fields to characterize the generated cluster states. Direct many-photon tomography is infeasible due to exponential growth in computational resources required for state reconstruction and signal-to-noise ratio scaling of the statistical moments. Leveraging the structure of cluster states, we calculate joint moments from sets of up to four nearest-neighbor qubits and employ a maximum likelihood estimation algorithm to obtain the matrix product operator representation of the global density matrix. Using the matrix product operator representation, we characterize the localizable entanglement for states with up to 18 photonic qubits.
Follow Us |
Engage
Become an APS Member |
My APS
Renew Membership |
Information for |
About APSThe American Physical Society (APS) is a non-profit membership organization working to advance the knowledge of physics. |
© 2024 American Physical Society
| All rights reserved | Terms of Use
| Contact Us
Headquarters
1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3844
(301) 209-3200
Editorial Office
100 Motor Pkwy, Suite 110, Hauppauge, NY 11788
(631) 591-4000
Office of Public Affairs
529 14th St NW, Suite 1050, Washington, D.C. 20045-2001
(202) 662-8700