Proposal for non-cryogenic quantum repeaters with hot hybrid alkali-noble gases
Jia-Wei Ji, Faezeh Kimiaee Asadi, Khabat Heshami, and Christoph Simon

TL;DR
This paper proposes a non-cryogenic quantum repeater architecture using hot alkali and noble-gas atoms, demonstrating long storage times, noise suppression, and competitive entanglement rates for scalable quantum networks.
Contribution
It introduces a novel quantum repeater design with hot hybrid gases, achieving long storage, noise reduction, and high fidelity without cryogenics, outperforming previous NV-center-based schemes.
Findings
Achieves entanglement over long distances with high fidelity.
Demonstrates repeater rates comparable to NV-center-based systems.
Shows the setup is feasible with current technology.
Abstract
We propose a quantum repeater architecture that can operate without cryogenics. Each node in our architecture builds on a cell of hot alkali atoms and noble-gas spins which offer a storage time as long as a few hours. Such a cell of hybrid gases is placed in a ring cavity, which allows us to suppress the detrimental four-wave mixing (FWM) noise in the system. We investigate the protocol based on a single-photon source made of an ensemble of the same hot alkali atoms. A single photon emitted from the source is either stored in the memory or transmitted to the central station to be detected. We quantify the fidelity and success probability of generating entanglement between two remote ensembles of noble-gas spins by taking into account finite memory efficiency, channel loss, and dark counts in detectors. We describe how the entanglement can be extended to long distances via entanglement…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
