A photon-photon quantum gate based on a single atom in an optical resonator
Bastian Hacker, Stephan Welte, Gerhard Rempe, Stephan Ritter

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a deterministic photon-photon quantum gate using a single atom in an optical resonator, achieving high fidelity and enabling advanced quantum information processing with photons.
Contribution
It presents the first implementation of a deterministic, high-fidelity photon-photon gate based on strong light-matter coupling in a single-atom cavity system.
Findings
Achieved a gate fidelity of approximately 76%.
Demonstrated conditional polarization flipping and entanglement generation.
Enabled most existing two-photon operations with potential for quantum computing.
Abstract
Two photons in free space pass each other undisturbed. This is ideal for the faithful transmission of information, but prohibits an interaction between the photons as required for a plethora of applications in optical quantum information processing. The long-standing challenge here is to realise a deterministic photon-photon gate. This requires an interaction so strong that the two photons can shift each others phase by pi. For polarisation qubits, this amounts to the conditional flipping of one photon's polarisation to an orthogonal state. So far, only probabilistic gates based on linear optics and photon detectors could be realised, as "no known or foreseen material has an optical nonlinearity strong enough to implement this conditional phase shift..." [Science 318, 1567]. Meanwhile, tremendous progress in the development of quantum-nonlinear systems has opened up new possibilities…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
