Experimental demonstration of entanglement delivery using a quantum network stack

Scaling current quantum communication demonstrations to a large-scale quantum network will require not only advancements in quantum hardware capabilities, but also robust control of such devices to bridge the gap to user demand. Moreover, the abstraction of tasks and services offered by the quantum...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Pompili, Matteo, Carlo Delle Donne, Ingmar te Raa, Bart van der Vecht, Skrzypczyk, Matthew, Ferreira, Guilherme, de Kluijver, Lisa, Stolk, Arian J, Hermans, Sophie L N, Pawełczak, Przemysław, Kozlowski, Wojciech, Hanson, Ronald, Wehner, Stephanie
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 25.11.2021
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Summary:Scaling current quantum communication demonstrations to a large-scale quantum network will require not only advancements in quantum hardware capabilities, but also robust control of such devices to bridge the gap to user demand. Moreover, the abstraction of tasks and services offered by the quantum network should enable platform-independent applications to be executed without knowledge of the underlying physical implementation. Here we experimentally demonstrate, using remote solid-state quantum network nodes, a link layer and a physical layer protocol for entanglement-based quantum networks. The link layer abstracts the physical-layer entanglement attempts into a robust, platform-independent entanglement delivery service. The system is used to run full state tomography of the delivered entangled states, as well as preparation of a remote qubit state on a server by its client. Our results mark a clear transition from physics experiments to quantum communication systems, which will enable the development and testing of components of future quantum networks.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2111.11332