Scalable Quantum Computing with Optical Links
M.J. Weaver, G. Arnold, H. Weaver, S. Gr\"oblacher, and R. Stockill

TL;DR
This paper explores scalable quantum computing using optical links to connect cryogenic quantum processors, overcoming current transducer limitations and enabling large-scale quantum data centers.
Contribution
It demonstrates methods for high-fidelity, on-demand entanglement via optical links with existing transducers, facilitating scalable quantum architectures.
Findings
Optical links can surpass individual cryogenic module performance.
High-fidelity, on-demand entanglement is achievable with current transducers.
Architectures for large-scale quantum data centers are proposed.
Abstract
Quantum computers have great potential to solve problems which are intractable on classical computers. However, quantum processors have not yet reached the required scale to run applications which outperform traditional computers. Leading hardware platforms, such as superconducting qubit based processors, will soon become bottlenecked by the physical constraints of their low temperature environments, and the expansion of quantum computers will necessitate quantum links between multiple processor modules. Optical frequencies offer the most promising path for these links due to their resilience to noise even at ambient temperature and the maturity of classical optical networks. However, required microwave-to-optics transducers cannot operate deterministically yet, which has widely been seen as a key challenge for their integration into fault-tolerant quantum computers. In this work, we…
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