Why I am optimistic about the silicon-photonic route to quantum computing
This is a short overview explaining how building a large-scale, silicon-photonic quantum computer has been reduced to the creation of good sources of 3-photon entangled states (and may simplify further). Given such sources, each photon needs to pass through a small, constant, number of components, i...
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Published in | APL photonics Vol. 2; no. 3; pp. 030901 - 030901-19 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
AIP Publishing LLC
01.03.2017
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Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | This is a short overview explaining how building a large-scale, silicon-photonic quantum
computer has been reduced to the creation of good sources of 3-photon entangled states
(and may simplify further). Given such sources, each photon needs to pass through a
small, constant, number of components, interfering with at most 2 other spatially nearby
photons, and
current photonics
engineering has already demonstrated the manufacture of thousands of components on
two-dimensional semiconductor chips with performance that, once scaled up, allows the
creation of tens of thousands of photons entangled in a state universal for quantum computation. At
present the fully integrated, silicon-photonic architecture we envisage involves creating
the required entangled states by starting with single-photons produced
non-deterministically by pumping silicon waveguides (or cavities) combined with on-chip
filters and nanowire superconducting detectors to herald that a photon has been produced. These
sources are multiplexed into being near-deterministic, and the single photons then passed through an
interferometer
to non-deterministically produce small entangled states—necessarily multiplexed to
near-determinism again. This is followed by a “ballistic” scattering of the small-scale
entangled photons
through an interferometer such that some photons are detected, leaving the remainder
in a large-scale entangled state which is provably universal for quantum computing
implemented by single-photon measurements. There are a large number of questions regarding
the optimum ways to make and use the final cluster state, dealing with static
imperfections, constructing the initial entangled photon sources and so on, that
need to be investigated before we can aim for millions of qubits capable of billions of
computational time steps. The focus in this article is on the theoretical side of such
questions. |
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ISSN: | 2378-0967 2378-0967 |
DOI: | 10.1063/1.4976737 |