Quantum Repeaters using Coherent-State Communication
Abstract
We investigate quantum repeater protocols based upon atomic qubit-entanglement distribution through optical coherent-state communication. Various measurement schemes for an optical mode entangled with two spatially separated atomic qubits are considered in order to nonlocally prepare conditional two-qubit entangled states. In particular, generalized measurements for unambiguous state discrimination enable one to completely eliminate spin-flip errors in the resulting qubit states, as they would occur in a homodyne-based scheme due to the finite overlap of the optical states in phase space. As a result, by using weaker coherent states, high initial fidelities can still be achieved for larger repeater spacing, at the expense of lower entanglement generation rates. In this regime, the coherent-state-based protocols start resembling single-photon-based repeater schemes.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0806.1153,
title = {Quantum Repeaters using Coherent-State Communication},
author = {Peter van Loock and Norbert Lütkenhaus and W. J. Munro and Kae Nemoto},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.1153},
year = {2010}
}
Comments
11 pages, 8 figures