Advances in silicon quantum photonics
Jeremy C. Adcock, Jueming Bao, Yulin Chi, Xiaojiong Chen, Davide, Bacco, Qihuang Gong, Leif K. Oxenl{\o}we, Jianwei Wang, and Yunhong Ding

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent progress in silicon quantum photonics, highlighting advancements, challenges, and future directions for scalable, integrated quantum photonic systems on a chip.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of developments in silicon quantum photonics over the past five years, including resolving a key experimental definition conflict.
Findings
Summarizes state-of-the-art silicon quantum photonic components.
Identifies technical challenges and promising research avenues.
Proposes standardization in Hong-Ou-Mandel interference measurement.
Abstract
Quantum technology is poised to enable a step change in human capability for computing, communications and sensing. Photons are indispensable as carriers of quantum information - they travel at the fastest possible speed and readily protected from decoherence. However, the system requires thousands of near-transparent components with ultra-low-latency control. For quantum technology to be implemented, a new paradigm photonic system is required: one with in-built coherence, stability, the ability to define arbitrary circuits, and a path to manufacturability. Silicon photonics has unparalleled density and component performance, which, with CMOS compatible fabrication, place it in a strong position for a scalable quantum photonics platform. This paper is a progress report on silicon quantum photonics, focused on developments in the past five years. We provide an introduction on silicon…
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