Deterministic multi-qubit entanglement in a quantum network
Youpeng Zhong, Hung-Shen Chang, Audrey Bienfait, \'Etienne Dumur,, Ming-Han Chou, Christopher R. Conner, Joel Grebel, Rhys G. Povey, Haoxiong, Yan, David I. Schuster, Andrew N. Cleland

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a superconducting quantum network that deterministically generates and transmits multi-qubit entanglement, including GHZ states, across two remote nodes, advancing scalable quantum computing and communication.
Contribution
It presents the first deterministic generation and transfer of multi-qubit entanglement in a superconducting quantum network with high fidelity.
Findings
Achieved a state transfer fidelity of 0.911 between nodes.
Successfully generated a six-qubit GHZ state across two nodes.
Demonstrated genuine multipartite entanglement with fidelities above 0.5.
Abstract
Quantum entanglement is a key resource for quantum computation and quantum communication \cite{Nielsen2010}. Scaling to large quantum communication or computation networks further requires the deterministic generation of multi-qubit entanglement \cite{Gottesman1999,Duan2001,Jiang2007}. The deterministic entanglement of two remote qubits has recently been demonstrated with microwave photons \cite{Kurpiers2018,Axline2018,Campagne2018,Leung2019,Zhong2019}, optical photons \cite{Humphreys2018} and surface acoustic wave phonons \cite{Bienfait2019}. However, the deterministic generation and transmission of multi-qubit entanglement has not been demonstrated, primarily due to limited state transfer fidelities. Here, we report a quantum network comprising two separate superconducting quantum nodes connected by a 1 meter-long superconducting coaxial cable, where each node includes three…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
