A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light

Distributing and sharing entanglement at a distance is a key ingredient in many future quantum communication protocols, however entanglement is a fragile resource and can break down upon interacting with the environment. Within this thesis we present two possible entanglement swapping protocols, and...

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Main Author: Parker, Ryan Charles
Other Authors: Spiller, Timothy P.
Published: University of York 2018
Subjects:
530
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.766604
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7666042019-03-05T15:29:19ZA loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of lightParker, Ryan CharlesSpiller, Timothy P.2018Distributing and sharing entanglement at a distance is a key ingredient in many future quantum communication protocols, however entanglement is a fragile resource and can break down upon interacting with the environment. Within this thesis we present two possible entanglement swapping protocols, and show that these protocols are resilient to small levels of photonic losses. We propose the use of these protocols in quantum communication schemes that require shared entangled qubits, in the form of a Bell state. The input states to our proposed protocols are hybrid entangled states, which are discrete-variable and continuous-variable entangled states. We use the vacuum and single photon Fock state as our discrete half, which is stationary in our entanglement swapping protocol, whereas the continuous variable half is modelled as travelling through lossy optical fibre before being measured. The first protocol uses coherent states in a superposition as propagating modes in our entanglement swapping setup, whereas the second, more complicated, protocol uses superposed cat states. We model photonic losses by applying a beam-splitter of transmission T to our propagating continuous variable modes, along with an input vacuum state. We also model the more realistic circumstance in which the losses in these two continuous variable modes are not equal. We then detect these continuous variable modes using a vacuum projective measurement and balanced homodyne detection. We also investigate homodyne measurement imperfections and non-ideal outcomes, as well as success probabilities of these measurement schemes. We calculate the entanglement negativity and linear entropy of our final two qubit state, as well as fidelity against the |\Phi^+ > Bell state in the coherent state protocol, and a phase-rotated |\Phi^+(\alpha)> Bell state in the cat state regime. We demonstrate that a small amount of loss mismatch does not destroy the overall entanglement, thus demonstrating the physical practicality of this protocol.530University of Yorkhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.766604http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/22822/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 530
spellingShingle 530
Parker, Ryan Charles
A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
description Distributing and sharing entanglement at a distance is a key ingredient in many future quantum communication protocols, however entanglement is a fragile resource and can break down upon interacting with the environment. Within this thesis we present two possible entanglement swapping protocols, and show that these protocols are resilient to small levels of photonic losses. We propose the use of these protocols in quantum communication schemes that require shared entangled qubits, in the form of a Bell state. The input states to our proposed protocols are hybrid entangled states, which are discrete-variable and continuous-variable entangled states. We use the vacuum and single photon Fock state as our discrete half, which is stationary in our entanglement swapping protocol, whereas the continuous variable half is modelled as travelling through lossy optical fibre before being measured. The first protocol uses coherent states in a superposition as propagating modes in our entanglement swapping setup, whereas the second, more complicated, protocol uses superposed cat states. We model photonic losses by applying a beam-splitter of transmission T to our propagating continuous variable modes, along with an input vacuum state. We also model the more realistic circumstance in which the losses in these two continuous variable modes are not equal. We then detect these continuous variable modes using a vacuum projective measurement and balanced homodyne detection. We also investigate homodyne measurement imperfections and non-ideal outcomes, as well as success probabilities of these measurement schemes. We calculate the entanglement negativity and linear entropy of our final two qubit state, as well as fidelity against the |\Phi^+ > Bell state in the coherent state protocol, and a phase-rotated |\Phi^+(\alpha)> Bell state in the cat state regime. We demonstrate that a small amount of loss mismatch does not destroy the overall entanglement, thus demonstrating the physical practicality of this protocol.
author2 Spiller, Timothy P.
author_facet Spiller, Timothy P.
Parker, Ryan Charles
author Parker, Ryan Charles
author_sort Parker, Ryan Charles
title A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
title_short A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
title_full A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
title_fullStr A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
title_full_unstemmed A loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
title_sort loss resilient entanglement swapping protocol using non-classical states of light
publisher University of York
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.766604
work_keys_str_mv AT parkerryancharles alossresiliententanglementswappingprotocolusingnonclassicalstatesoflight
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