Quantum-Computing Architecture based on Large-Scale Multi-Dimensional Continuous-Variable Cluster States in a Scalable Photonic Platform
Bo-Han Wu, Rafael N. Alexander, Shuai Liu, Zheshen Zhang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a scalable photonic architecture for large-scale continuous-variable cluster states using Kerr microcombs, enabling one-way quantum computing with high-dimensional entangled optical modes in a practical platform.
Contribution
It introduces a novel architecture combining Kerr microcombs and CV quantum info to generate large, multi-dimensional cluster states suitable for scalable quantum computing.
Findings
Deterministic generation of 1D, 2D, and 3D CV cluster states.
Supports hundreds of frequency-multiplexed modes and unlimited time-domain modes.
Compatible with silicon photonics for scalable implementation.
Abstract
Quantum computing is a disruptive paradigm widely believed to be capable of solving classically intractable problems. However, the route toward full-scale quantum computers is obstructed by immense challenges associated with the scalability of the platform, the connectivity of qubits, and the required fidelity of various components. One-way quantum computing is an appealing approach that shifts the burden from high-fidelity quantum gates and quantum memories to the generation of high-quality entangled resource states and high fidelity measurements. Cluster states are an important ingredient for one-way quantum computing, and a compact, portable, and mass producible platform for large-scale cluster states will be essential for the widespread deployment of one-way quantum computing. Here, we bridge two distinct fields---Kerr microcombs and continuous-variable (CV) quantum information---to…
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