TL;DR
This paper presents a circuit-level design of a quantum repeater and benchmarks its performance on IBM Quantum hardware, providing insights into current capabilities for long-distance quantum communication.
Contribution
It introduces a complete quantum repeater architecture implemented with quantum circuits and evaluates its performance on real quantum hardware, bridging theory and practical application.
Findings
Achieved 26% fidelity of shared Bell pairs
Yielded 49% success rate in the quantum repeater protocol
Provided a benchmark for current quantum hardware performance
Abstract
Quantum communication relies on the existence of entanglement between two nodes of a network. However, due to its fragile nature, it is nearly impossible to establish entanglement at large distances through the direct transmission of qubits. Quantum repeaters have been proposed to solve this problem, which split-up the network to create small-scale entangled links and then connect them up to create the large-scale link. As researchers race to establish entanglement over larger and larger distances, it becomes essential to gauge the performance and robustness of the different protocols that have been proposed to design a quantum repeater, before deploying them in real life. Currently available noisy quantum computers are ideal for this task, as they can emulate the noisy environment in a quantum communication channel, and provide a measure for how the protocols will perform on real-life…
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