English

Distributed Quantum Computation Architecture Using Semiconductor Nanophotonics

Quantum Physics 2010-06-23 v2

Abstract

In a large-scale quantum computer, the cost of communications will dominate the performance and resource requirements, place many severe demands on the technology, and constrain the architecture. Unfortunately, fault-tolerant computers based entirely on photons with probabilistic gates, though equipped with "built-in" communication, have very large resource overheads; likewise, computers with reliable probabilistic gates between photons or quantum memories may lack sufficient communication resources in the presence of realistic optical losses. Here, we consider a compromise architecture, in which semiconductor spin qubits are coupled by bright laser pulses through nanophotonic waveguides and cavities using a combination of frequent probabilistic and sparse determinstic entanglement mechanisms. The large photonic resource requirements incurred by the use of probabilistic gates for quantum communication are mitigated in part by the potential high-speed operation of the semiconductor nanophotonic hardware. The system employs topological cluster-state quantum error correction for achieving fault-tolerance. Our results suggest that such an architecture/technology combination has the potential to scale to a system capable of attacking classically intractable computational problems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.2686,
  title  = {Distributed Quantum Computation Architecture Using Semiconductor Nanophotonics},
  author = {Rodney Van Meter and Thaddeus D. Ladd and Austin G. Fowler and Yoshihisa Yamamoto},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.2686},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

29 pages, 7 figures; v2: heavily revised figures improve architecture presentation, additional detail on physical parameters, a few new references

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:13:32.073Z