Optomechanical resource for fault-tolerant quantum computing
Margaret Pavlovich, Peter Rakich, Shruti Puri

TL;DR
This paper proposes using optomechanical acoustic modes as reliable, long-lived quantum memories to improve the production of photonic resource states for fault-tolerant quantum computing, reducing complexity and redundancy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optomechanical approach that uses acoustic modes as quantum caches, enabling deterministic transfer of quantum states to optical modes for scalable quantum computing.
Findings
Acoustic modes serve as long-lived quantum memories for photonic states.
The method allows on-demand transfer of quantum states from acoustic to optical modes.
The approach reduces the complexity of probabilistic optical resource generation.
Abstract
Fusion-based quantum computing with dual-rail qubits is a leading candidate for scalable quantum computing using linear optics. This paradigm requires single photons which are entangled into small resource states before being fed into a fusion network. The most common sources for single optical photons and for small entangled states are probabilistic and heralded. The realization of a single reliable deterministic source requires many redundant probabilistic sources and a complex optical network for rerouting and retiming probabilistic outputs. In this work, we show how optomechanics enables reliable production of resources for photonic quantum computing without the redundancy of the all-optical approach. This is achieved by using acoustic modes as caches of quantum resources, ranging from single-particle states to small entangled states, with on-demand read-out. The advantages of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators
