TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the implementation of optimal quantum telecloning protocols on NISQ hardware, achieving near-theoretical fidelity and showcasing the potential for quantum information processing on current noisy quantum devices.
Contribution
The authors develop and experimentally implement universal, symmetric, and optimal quantum telecloning circuits on IBMQ and Quantinuum NISQ devices, including real-time feed-forward control.
Findings
Achieved mean clone fidelities close to theoretical limits.
Demonstrated quantum telecloning with mid-circuit measurement and classical feed-forward.
Validated NISQ devices' capability for quantum information network tasks.
Abstract
Due to the no-cloning theorem, generating perfect quantum clones of an arbitrary unknown quantum state is not possible, however approximate quantum clones can be constructed. Quantum telecloning is a protocol that originates from a combination of quantum teleportation and quantum cloning. Here we present and quantum telecloning circuits, with and without ancilla, that are theoretically optimal (meaning the clones have the highest fidelity allowed by quantum mechanics), universal (meaning the clone fidelity is independent of the state being cloned), and symmetric (meaning the clones all have the same fidelity). We implement these circuits on gate model IBMQ and Quantinuum NISQ hardware and quantify the clone fidelities using parallel single qubit state tomography. Quantum telecloning using mid-circuit measurement with classical feed-forward control…
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