Scalable Networking of Neutral-Atom Qubits: Nanofiber-Based Approach for Multiprocessor Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer
Shinichi Sunami, Shiro Tamiya, Ryotaro Inoue, Hayata Yamasaki, Akihisa, Goban

TL;DR
This paper proposes a scalable approach for building large multiprocessor fault-tolerant quantum computers using neutral atoms coupled via nanofiber optical cavities and fiber-optic networks, enabling fast entanglement across modules.
Contribution
It introduces a nanofiber-based atom-photon interface design that allows efficient entanglement generation between multiple neutral-atom quantum processing units.
Findings
Nanofiber cavities can couple over 100 atoms with high cooperativity.
Achieves a Bell pair generation rate of 100 kHz.
Supports scalable, fast entanglement for large quantum networks.
Abstract
Neutral atoms are among the leading platforms toward realizing fault-tolerant quantum computation (FTQC). However, scaling up a single neutral-atom device beyond atoms to meet the demands of FTQC for practical applications remains a challenge. To overcome this challenge, we clarify the criteria and technological requirements for further scaling based on multiple neutral atom quantum processing units (QPUs) connected through photonic networking links. Our quantitative analysis shows that nanofiber optical cavities have the potential as an efficient atom-photon interface to enable fast entanglement generation between atoms in distinct neutral-atom modules, allowing multiple neutral-atom QPUs to operate cooperatively without sacrificing computational speed. Using state-of-the-art millimeter-scale nanofiber cavities with the finesse of thousands, over a hundred atoms can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata · Quantum Information and Cryptography
