Towards real-world quantum networks: a review
Shi-Hai Wei, Bo Jing, Xue-Ying Zhang, Jin-Yu Liao, Chen-Zhi Yuan,, Bo-Yu Fan, Chen Lyu, Dian-Li Zhou, You Wang, Guang-Wei Deng, Hai-Zhi Song,, Daniel Oblak, Guang-Can Guo, Qiang Zhou

TL;DR
This review discusses the development and experimental progress of quantum networks over the past two decades, focusing on entangling quantum nodes across various physical systems for quantum communication and computation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the state-of-the-art in quantum network development, comparing different physical systems for entanglement distribution.
Findings
Progress in entangling quantum nodes using diverse physical systems
Comparison of merits of different quantum systems for networking
Advancements towards realizing a global quantum network
Abstract
Quantum networks play an extremely important role in quantum information science, with application to quantum communication, computation, metrology and fundamental tests. One of the key challenges for implementing a quantum network is to distribute entangled flying qubits to spatially separated nodes, at which quantum interfaces or transducers map the entanglement onto stationary qubits. The stationary qubits at the separated nodes constitute quantum memories realized in matter while the flying qubits constitute quantum channels realized in photons. Dedicated efforts around the world for more than twenty years have resulted in both major theoretical and experimental progress towards entangling quantum nodes and ultimately building a global quantum network. Here, we review the development of quantum networks and the experimental progress over the past two decades leading to the current…
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