English

Many-Body Entanglement in Solid-State Emitters

Quantum Physics 2025-11-27 v1

Abstract

The preparation and control of quantum states lie at the heart of quantum information science (QIS). Recent advances in solid-state quantum emitters (QEs) and nanophotonics have transformed the landscape of quantum photonic technologies, enabling scalable generation of quantum states of light and matter. A new frontier in solid-state quantum photonics is the engineering of many-body interactions between QEs and photons to achieve robust coherence and controllable many-body entanglement. These entangled states, including photonic graph and cluster states, superradiant emission, and emergent quantum phases, are promising for quantum computation, sensing, and simulation. However, intrinsic inhomogeneities and decoherence in solid-state platforms pose significant challenges to realize such complex entangled states. This review provides an overview of the fundamental many-body interactions and dynamics at the light-matter interfaces of solid-state QEs, and discusses recent advances in mitigating decoherence and harnessing robust many-body coherence.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2511.20797,
  title  = {Many-Body Entanglement in Solid-State Emitters},
  author = {Emma Daggett and Christian M. Lange and Bennet Windt and Arshag Danageozian and Alexander Senichev and Jordi Arnau Montañà-López and Chanchal and Kinjol Barua and Xingyu Gao and Zhaoyun Zheng and Vijin Kizhake Veetil and Souvik Biswas and Jonas M. Peterson and Na Liu and Chuchuan Hong and Teri Odom and Matthew Pelton and Tongcang Li and Jelena Vučković and Vladamir Shalaev and Alexandra Boltasseva and Sophia E. Economou and Jonathan D. Hood and Valentin Walther and Rahul Trivedi and Libai Huang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2511.20797},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T07:55:05.166Z