Linear-optical implementations of the iSWAP and controlled NOT gates based on conventional detectors
Monika Bartkowiak, Adam Miranowicz

TL;DR
This paper presents new linear-optical implementations of the iSWAP and CNOT gates that operate with conventional detectors, avoiding the need for photon-number resolving detectors, and analyzes their success probabilities and robustness against imperfections.
Contribution
It introduces nondestructive linear-optical implementations of iSWAP and CNOT gates using conventional detectors, expanding practical options for quantum gate realization.
Findings
Nondestructive iSWAP gate success probability: η^4/8
Various implementation schemes with different ancilla states and detection methods
Analysis of detector imperfections on gate performance
Abstract
The majority of linear-optical nondestructive implementations of universal quantum gates are based on single-photon resolving detectors. We propose two implementations, which are nondestructive (i.e., destroying only ancilla states) and work with conventional detectors (i.e., which do not resolve number of photons). Moreover, we analyze a recently proposed scheme of Wang et al. [J. Opt. Soc. Am. B \textbf{27}, 27 (2010)] of an optical iSWAP gate based on two ancillae in Bell's states, classical feedforward, and conventional detectors with the total probability of success equal to , where is detector's efficiency. By observing that the iSWAP gate can be replaced by the controlled NOT (CNOT) gate with additional deterministic gates, we list various possible linear-optical implementations of the iSWAP gate: (i) assuming various ancilla states (unentangled, two-photon and…
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