Quantum Interfaces Using Nanoscale Surface Plasmons
Abstract
The strong coupling between individual optical emitters and propagating surface plasmons confined to a conducting nanotip make this system act as an ideal interface for quantum networks, through which a stationary qubit and a flying photon (surface plasmon) qubit can be interconverted via a Raman process. This quantum interface paves the way for many essential functions of a quantum network, including sending, receiving, transferring, swapping, and entangling qubits at distributed quantum nodes as well as a deterministic source and an efficient detector of a single-photon. Numerical simulation shows that this scheme is robust against experimental imperfections and has high fidelity. Furthermore, being smaller this interface would significantly facilitate the scalability of quantum computers.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0809.4118,
title = {Quantum Interfaces Using Nanoscale Surface Plasmons},
author = {Fang-Yu Hong and Shi-Jie Xiong},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.4118},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
4 pages 3 figures 1 table