Hybrid Quantum Repeater Using Bright Coherent Light
Abstract
We describe a quantum repeater protocol for long-distance quantum communication. In this scheme, entanglement is created between qubits at intermediate stations of the channel by using a weak dispersive light-matter interaction and distributing the outgoing bright coherent-light pulses among the stations. Noisy entangled pairs of electronic spin are then prepared with high success probability via homodyne detection and postselection. The local gates for entanglement purification and swapping are deterministic and measurement-free, based upon the same coherent-light resources and weak interactions as for the initial entanglement distribution. Finally, the entanglement is stored in a nuclear-spin-based quantum memory. With our system, qubit-communication rates approaching 100 Hz over 1280 km with fidelities near 99% are possible for reasonable local gate errors.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- June 2006
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:quant-ph/0510202
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhRvL..96x0501V
- Keywords:
-
- 03.67.Hk;
- 03.67.Mn;
- 42.50.Pq;
- Quantum communication;
- Entanglement production characterization and manipulation;
- Cavity quantum electrodynamics;
- micromasers;
- Quantum Physics
- E-Print:
- title changed, final published version