| Literature DB >> 27282928 |
Thomas Meany1, Devon N Biggerstaff2,3, Matthew A Broome2,3, Alessandro Fedrizzi2,3,4, Michael Delanty1, M J Steel1, Alexei Gilchrist5, Graham D Marshall6, Andrew G White2,3, Michael J Withford1.
Abstract
Scaling up linear-optics quantum computing will require multi-photon gates which are compact, phase-stable, exhibit excellent quantum interference, and have success heralded by the detection of ancillary photons. We investigate the design, fabrication and characterisation of the optimal known gate scheme which meets these requirements: the Knill controlled-Z gate, implemented in integrated laser-written waveguide arrays. We show device performance to be less sensitive to phase variations in the circuit than to small deviations in the coupler reflectivity, which are expected given the tolerance values of the fabrication method. The mode fidelity is also shown to be less sensitive to reflectivity and phase errors than the process fidelity. Our best device achieves a fidelity of 0.931 ± 0.001 with the ideal 4 × 4 unitary circuit and a process fidelity of 0.680 ± 0.005 with the ideal computational-basis process.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27282928 PMCID: PMC4901290 DOI: 10.1038/srep25126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The circuit for a hcz gate showing paths for ancillary photons A and B as well as the computational qubits; the control (target) photon is encoded across spatial paths C0 (T0) representing |0〉 and C (T) representing |1〉 . Modes are labeled C (Control), T (Target), A (Ancilla) and B (Ancilla). The |0〉 -modes do not interact in the gate; the four remaining modes undergo four beamsplitting operations with reflectivities R(θ) = cos2(θ) as described in Eq. (1). The light-coloured side indicates the surface yielding a relative π phase change upon reflection. (b) The four interacting circuit modes modelled as a waveguide array, showing the crossover and optimal reflectivities for the BSs implemented using evanescent coupling. The waveguides are separated by 127 μm at the device end facets; fan-in and fan-out regions are not shown. The input mode labeling is reversed compared to (a) due to the reflectance of the couplers being defined as the proportion of input light which couples from one waveguide to the other.
Figure 2Variation of the model mode fidelity F and process fidelity F with deviations Δ from the ideal BS angles and internal phase shift.
The ideal phase is zero and Δ Φ represents any net extra phase introduced between beamsplitters. For the BSs Δ is the variation from the ideal angle; the total reflectivity will be cos2(θideal + Δ θ). In both cases Δ is a length variation in the physical device. The top graphs show the fidelity when one Δ parameter is varied and the rest are held at zero. The points shown represent the deviations found in our best experimentally-characterised circuit; see Fig. 3 for further details. Note that on this scale both the curves and points for BS1 and BS2 are indistinguishable. The bottom graphs show the fidelities for 2000 simulated instances of hcz gates with all Δ parameters drawn randomly from Gaussian distributions with mean 0 and standard deviation σΔ. The purple distribution has σΔ = 0.1, which is similar in magnitude to most of the Δ parameters from our best measured circuit; the green distribution has σΔ = 0.05 in order to show the fidelities achievable with a modest improvement in fabrication accuracy. The resulting green (purple) distributions have means of 0.994 (0.980) for F and 0.962 (0.863) for F. Note the logarithmic scale on the horizontal axes.
Figure 3Results from coherent circuit characterisation.
Error bars are too small to see and are thus absent. Top: Mode and process fidelity of the measured circuit mappings with the ideal hcz circuit unitary, optimised over local external phases. The mean uncertainty in F and F are 0.002 and 0.006 respectively; these uncertainties were determined via Monte Carlo methods using the measured uncertainties in phases and moduli. Centre: Net undesired internal phase ϕ. The displayed value is the mean of the four values determined from the four occurrences of ϕ in comparing Umeas for each circuit to Eq. 2. For all 12 candidate circuits these differ by a maximum of 0.07. The variation between these four values dominated that between our many phase measurement trials for each circuit, and their standard deviation is thus taken to be our uncertainty; the mean resulting value over all 12 circuits is 0.0015. Bottom: Deviations Δ θ from the ideal reflectivity parameters for the four BSs. For all values of Δ θ the mean uncertainty—determined from repeated measurement trials—is 0.0026. In all 3 panels, the measured circuits are ordered by decreasing process fidelity.
Figure 4(a) Setup for measuring two-photon interference. Degenerate photon pairs at 820 nm are created via spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in a nonlinear β-barium-borate (BBO) crystal pumped by a 410 nm frequency-doubled Ti:Sapphire laser. Manual polarisation controllers (POL) enable alignment of SPDC polarisation with the axes of polarisation-maintaining fibers coupled to the test device. We detect photons in coincidence using avalanche photo diodes (APDs). (b) Representative observed non-classical interference patterns, showing anti-coalescent and coalescent interference for two different output mode combinations as well as fits to the data with Gaussian and sinc components. The error bars shown are calculated from Poissonian counting statistics. (c) Two photon interference results for the best hcz circuit. We compare predictions (left) from the coherently-characterised circuit against measured two-photon interference visibilities (centre). The right panel shows visibilities for the ideal circuit U; most of the difference between this panel and the other two is due to the deviation in the best circuit from the ideal reflectivity for BS4 and unwanted net phase ϕ, as shown in Fig. 3. For the residuals after subtracting the measured visibilities from the predictions the mean and standard deviation are − 0.002 and 0.061, while after subtracting the measured values from the ideal values they are − 0.022 and 0.282 respectively.