Development of Quantum InterConnects for Next-Generation Information Technologies
David Awschalom, Karl K. Berggren, Hannes Bernien, Sunil Bhave,, Lincoln D. Carr, Paul Davids, Sophia E. Economou, Dirk Englund, Andrei, Faraon, Marty Fejer, Saikat Guha, Martin V. Gustafsson, Evelyn Hu, Liang, Jiang, Jungsang Kim, Boris Korzh, Prem Kumar, Paul G. Kwiat, Marko

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of developing quantum interconnects (QuICs) as essential components for scalable quantum information systems, highlighting challenges and the need for collaborative research across diverse platforms.
Contribution
It provides a community consensus on the scientific needs, opportunities, and challenges for quantum interconnects over the next 2-5 years.
Findings
Identifies key challenges in quantum interconnect development
Highlights the need for collaborative, cross-platform research
Outlines a strategic research agenda for the next 2-5 years
Abstract
Just as classical information technology rests on a foundation built of interconnected information-processing systems, quantum information technology (QIT) must do the same. A critical component of such systems is the interconnect, a device or process that allows transfer of information between disparate physical media, for example, semiconductor electronics, individual atoms, light pulses in optical fiber, or microwave fields. While interconnects have been well engineered for decades in the realm of classical information technology, quantum interconnects (QuICs) present special challenges, as they must allow the transfer of fragile quantum states between different physical parts or degrees of freedom of the system. The diversity of QIT platforms (superconducting, atomic, solid-state color center, optical, etc.) that will form a quantum internet poses additional challenges. As quantum…
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