Single-photon Kerr nonlinearities do not help quantum computation
Abstract
By embedding an atom capable of electromagnetically induced transparency inside an appropriate photonic-crystal microcavity it may become possible to realize an optical nonlinearity that can impart a π -rad-peak phase shift in response to a single-photon excitation. Such a device, if it operated at high fidelity, would then complete a universal gate set for all-optical quantum computation. It is shown here that the causal, noninstantaneous behavior of any χ(3) nonlinearity is enough to preclude such a high-fidelity operation. In particular, when a single-photon-sensitive χ(3) nonlinearity has a response time that is much shorter than the duration of the quantum computer’s single-photon pulses, essentially no overall phase shift is imparted to these pulses by cross-phase modulation. Conversely, when this nonlinearity has a response time that is much longer than this pulse duration a single-photon pulse can induce a π -rad overall phase shift through cross-phase modulation, but the phase noise injected by the causal, noninstantaneous response function precludes this from being a high-fidelity operation.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review A
- Pub Date:
- June 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhRvA..73f2305S
- Keywords:
-
- 03.67.Lx;
- 42.65.Hw;
- 42.50.Ar;
- Quantum computation;
- Phase conjugation;
- photorefractive and Kerr effects;
- Photon statistics and coherence theory