General many-body entanglement swapping protocol: opportunities for distributed quantum computing
Santeri Huhtanen, Yousef Mafi, Ali G. Moghaddam, Teemu Ojanen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a generalized many-body entanglement swapping protocol that enables sharing complex quantum states across multiple parties with high fidelity, facilitating advancements in distributed quantum computing and fault-tolerant quantum networks.
Contribution
It develops a novel many-body entanglement swapping method that maintains state fidelity, eliminates postselection, and extends to networks, advancing distributed quantum computing capabilities.
Findings
Achieves near-unity fidelity in sharing many-body states
Demonstrates protocol implementation on real quantum hardware
Enables fault-tolerant entanglement swapping and distributed quantum computing
Abstract
Sharing entangled pairs between non-signaling parties via entanglement swapping constitutes a striking demonstration of the nonlocality of quantum mechanics and a crucial building block for future quantum technologies. In this work, we generalize pair-swapping methods by introducing a many-body entanglement swapping protocol, which allows two non-signaling parties to share general many-body states along an arbitrary partitioning. The shared many-body state retains exactly the same Schmidt vectors as the target state and exhibits typically high fidelity, which approaches unity as the variance of the Schmidt coefficients vanishes. Moreover, we demonstrate how the three-party protocol can be generalized to many-body swapping networks, enabling a general many-body state sharing with unit fidelity via arbitrary number of intermediate nodes. This is achieved by replacing all but one of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum many-body systems
