An Improved Design for All-Photonic Quantum Repeaters
Ashlesha Patil, Saikat Guha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a more resource-efficient all-photonic quantum repeater design that enhances entanglement rates by boosting link qubit entanglement probability and employing an adaptive logical BSM scheme, reducing resource overhead.
Contribution
A novel RGS design that increases entanglement rate using fewer qubits and an adaptive BSM scheme for loss-only errors, improving efficiency over prior methods.
Findings
Higher entanglement rate with fewer qubits.
Adaptive logical BSM outperforms previous schemes.
Reduced optical modes for logical BSM.
Abstract
All-photonic quantum repeaters use multi-qubit photonic graph states, called repeater graph states (RGS), instead of matter-based quantum memories, for protection against predominantly loss errors. The RGS comprises tree-graph-encoded logical qubits for error correction at the repeaters and physical {\em link} qubits to create entanglement between neighboring repeaters. The two methods to generate the RGS are probabilistic stitching -- using linear optical Bell state measurements (fusion) -- of small entangled states prepared via multiplexed-probabilistic linear optical circuits fed with single photons, and a direct deterministic preparation using a small number of quantum-logic-capable solid-state emitters. The resource overhead due to fusions and the circuit depth of the quantum emitter system both increase with the size of the RGS. Therefore engineering a resource-efficient RGS is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Optical Network Technologies · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
