Nippon Telegraph And Telephone Corp : An On-Chip Quantum Buffer Realized - A Key Component For A Photonic Quantum Computer On A Chip
An on-chip quantum buffer realized A key component for a photonic quantum computer on a chip
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. has realized a quantum buffer integrated on an optical waveguide. The buffer is based on the "slow light effect", where the propagation speed of a pulsed light in a special optical waveguide slows significantly compared with the speed of light in vacuum.
The buffer facilitates the precise synchronization of photons in two photon quantum interference experiments needed for realizing quantum gates, and thus moves us forward in our goal of realizing quantum computers based on photonic quantum bit (qubit).
This result will be published in the UK science journal "Nature Communications" on November 12, 2013.
This research was supported in part by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS; Head Office: Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo; President: Yuichiro Anzai) KAKENHI.
- Background
There are many schemes for the physical realization of a qubit that can be used for quantum computing, including superconducting devices, semiconductor nanostructures, atoms and photons. Among them, a photon can be used as a stable qubit, since a photon rarely is affected by noise in environment.
To construct a quantum computer, we need "two-qubit quantum gates" where logic operations to two qubits are undertaken by interacting them. In the case of photonic qubits, it is well known that such gates are constructed using the quantum interference of photons. Recently, intensive research has been undertaken to build integrated quantum optical circuits in order to enable and realize large-scale photonic quantum computers. Shows an example of an integrated quantum optical circuit, where photon sources , photon detectors , photonic quantum circuits and photonic quantum buffers are integrated onto a single optical waveguide.
For the realization of quantum gates based on photon interference, we need to synchronize the arrival times of photons at the photonic quantum circuits very precisely. A quantum buffer, where a photon is stored while faithfully preserving its quantum state, can facilitate the synchronization of the photons and thus achieve a quantum gate operation.
- Achievements
We have realized a quantum buffer by using the "slow light effect" (where the speed of pulsed light is significantly reduced compared with the speed of light in vacuum) in coupled nanocavities fabricated utilizing our silicon photonic crystal fabrication technology.
We undertook our experiments described below to evaluate the performance of these coupled nanocavities as a quantum buffer. As a result, we successfully demonstrated that the buffer could slow down the speed of pulsed photons to 1/60 of the speed of light in vacuum while faithfully preserving its quantum state. This result confirmed that the developed device could be used as a quantum buffer integrated on chip.
The use of the quantum buffer will facilitate the synchronization of photons in various patterns of optical circuits, and thus is expected to increase the integration level of the quantum optical circuit. In addition, the tunability of our buffer will help realize the reconfigurable quantum optical circuit.
Experiments
- The setup of our experiment is shown in . A photon from a quantum correlated photon pair source was transmitted through the silicon photonic crystal coupled nanocavities, and the temporal correlation between the two photons was measured. As a result, we confirmed that the photon was stored in the coupled nanocavities for 150 ps while the temporal correlation between the two photons was preserved.
- We confirmed that the delay time could be tuned by 50 ps by changing the chip temperature.
- Further we showed that the buffer preserves entanglement by storing and retrieving one photon from an entangled photon pair.
- Technical Features Silicon photonic crystal coupled nanocavities
Since an optical cavity has an ability to store light, we can obtain the slow light effect by coupling many cavities in an array. NTT Basic Research Laboratories fabricated coupled nanocavities with a total length of 840
Source: Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp.