Quantum teleportation in high dimensions
Abstract
Precise measurement or perfect cloning of unknown quantum states is forbidden by the laws of quantum mechanics. Yet, quantum teleportation in principle allows for a faithful and disembodied transmission of unknown quantum states between distant quantum systems using entanglement. There have been numerous experiments on teleportation of quantum states of single photons, atoms, trapped ions, defects in solid states, and superconducting circuits. However, all demonstrations to date were limited to a two-dimensional subspaceso-called qubitof the quantized multiple levels of the quantum systems. In general, a quantum particle can naturally possess not only multiple degrees of freedom, but also, many degrees of freedom can have high quantum number beyond the simplified two-level subspace. Here, making use of multiport beam-splitters and ancillary single photons, we propose a resource-efficient and extendable scheme for teleportation of arbitrarily high-dimensional photonic quantum states. We report the first experimental teleportation of a qutrit, which is equivalent to a spin-1 system. Measurements over a complete set of 12 states in mutually unbiased bases yield a teleportation fidelity of 0.75(1), well above the optimal single-copy qutrit-state-estimation limit of 1/2. The fidelity also exceeds the limit of 2/3, the maximum possible for explanation through qubits only. Thus, we strictly prove a genuine three-dimensional, universal, and highly non-classical quantum teleportation. Combining previous methods of teleportation of two-particle composite states and multiple degrees of freedom, our work provides a complete toolbox for teleporting a quantum particle intact. We expect that our results will pave the way for quantum technology applications in high dimensions, since teleportation plays a central role in quantum repeaters and quantum networks.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1906.09697,
title = {Quantum teleportation in high dimensions},
author = {Yi-Han Luo and Han-Sen Zhong and Manuel Erhard and Xi-Lin Wang and Li-Chao Peng and Mario Krenn and Xiao Jiang and Li Li and Nai-Le Liu and Chao-Yang Lu and Anton Zeilinger and Jian-Wei Pan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1906.09697},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
23 pages, 12 figures, the version accepted by Physical Review Letters on 22nd July. The previous version was first submitted to a journal on 19th May