Quantum Networking Fundamentals: From Physical Protocols to Network Engineering
Athanasios Gkelias, Felix T. A. Burt, Kin K. Leung

TL;DR
This paper introduces a network-centric framework for quantum networking, emphasizing software-defined control, hardware abstraction, and trade-off analysis to enable scalable, multi-tenant quantum internet infrastructure.
Contribution
It develops reference models for software-defined quantum networking and a quantum network operating system, bridging physics and classical networking communities.
Findings
Proposes a dual-plane architecture for quantum networks.
Synthesizes a Quantum Network Utility Maximization framework.
Analyzes distributed quantum AI over imperfect networks.
Abstract
The realization of the Quantum Internet promises transformative capabilities in secure communication, distributed quantum computing, and high-precision metrology. However, transitioning from laboratory experiments to a scalable, multi-tenant network utility introduces deep orchestration challenges. Current development is often siloed within physics communities, prioritizing hardware, while the classical networking community lacks architectural models to manage fragile quantum resources. This tutorial bridges this divide by providing a network-centric view of quantum networking. We dismantle idealized assumptions in current simulators to address the "simulation-reality gap," recasting them as explicit control-plane constraints. To bridge this gap, we establish Software-Defined Quantum Networking (SDQN) as a prerequisite for scale, prioritizing a symbiotic, dual-plane architecture where…
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