Experimental demonstration of a BDCZ quantum repeater node
Zhen-Sheng Yuan, Yu-Ao Chen, Bo Zhao, Shuai Chen, Joerg Schmiedmayer,, Jian-Wei Pan

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a key component of quantum repeaters by successfully performing entanglement swapping with atomic quantum memories, advancing long-distance quantum communication technology.
Contribution
It experimentally implements entanglement swapping with storage and retrieval in atomic ensembles, a crucial step towards practical BDCZ quantum repeaters.
Findings
Entanglement swapping with atomic quantum memories achieved.
Entanglement stored and verified via photon conversion.
Method is phase insensitive, suitable for quantum repeaters.
Abstract
Quantum communication is a method that offers efficient and secure ways for the exchange of information in a network. Large-scale quantum communication (of the order of 100 km) has been achieved; however, serious problems occur beyond this distance scale, mainly due to inevitable photon loss in the transmission channel. Quantum communication eventually fails when the probability of a dark count in the photon detectors becomes comparable to the probability that a photon is correctly detected. To overcome this problem, Briegel, D\"{u}r, Cirac and Zoller (BDCZ) introduced the concept of quantum repeaters, combining entanglement swapping and quantum memory to efficiently extend the achievable distances. Although entanglement swapping has been experimentally demonstrated, the implementation of BDCZ quantum repeaters has proved challenging owing to the difficulty of integrating a quantum…
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