English

Wavelength conversion for single-photon polarization qubits through continuous variable quantum teleportation

Quantum Physics 2022-06-15 v1

Abstract

A quantum internet connects remote quantum processors that need interact and exchange quantum signals over a long distance through photonic channels. However, these quantum nodes are usually composed of quantum systems with emitted photons unsuitable for long-distance transmission. Therefore, quantum wavelength conversion to telecom is crucial for long-distance quantum networks based on optical fiber. Here we propose wavelength conversion devices for single-photon polarization qubits using continuous variable quantum teleportation, which can efficiently convert qubits between near-infrared (780/795 nm suitable for interacting with atomic quantum nodes) and telecom wavelength (1300-1500 nm suitable for long-distance transmission). The teleportation uses entangled photon sources (i.e., non-degenerate two-mode squeezed state) that can be generated by four-wave mixing in rubidium atomic vapor cells, with a diamond configuration of atomic transitions. The entangled fields can be emitted in two orthogonal polarizations with locked relative phase, making them especially suitable for interfacing with single-photon polarization qubits. Our work paves the way for the realization of long-distance quantum networks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2105.04737,
  title  = {Wavelength conversion for single-photon polarization qubits through continuous variable quantum teleportation},
  author = {Xi-Wang Luo and Chuanwei Zhang and Irina Novikova and Chen Qian and Shengwang Du},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2105.04737},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

7 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T01:58:10.616Z