Researchers at the University of Chicago recently introduced a new quantum communication testbed with remote superconducting nodes and demonstrated bidirectional multiphoton communication on this testbed. Their paper, published in Physical Review Letters, could open a new route towards realizing the efficient communication of complex quantum states in superconducting circuits.
"We are developing superconducting qubits for modular quantum computing and as a quantum communication testbed," Andrew Cleland, co-author of the paper, told Phys.org. "Both rely on being able to communicate quantum states coherently between qubit 'nodes' that are connected to one another with a sparse communication network, typically a single physical transmission line."
The researchers' recent study builds on two previous research papers published in Nature Physics and Nature. In these previous works, the team demonstrated that they could generate remote entanglement and send complex quantum states, the latter of which one qubit at a time.
"In our new study, we wanted to try to send complex quantum states representing multiple qubits at the same time," Cleland said. "To do this, we loaded the quantum state to be sent into a resonator and then send the entire resonator state into the transmission line, catching it with a remote resonator for subsequent analysis."
Resonators, devices that exhibit electrical resonance, have a nominally infinite number of quantum levels. As a result, they are theoretically capable of storing very complex states that encode several qubits' worth of data. Due to these advantageous characteristics, using resonators to send and receive data could increase the available bandwidth.
In their experiment, Cleland and his colleagues used two superconducting qubits, each of which was connected to a tunable superconducting resonator. Each of these resonators was, in turn, connected to a 2m-long transmission line via a device known as a variable coupler.
"We use one superconducting qubit to 'program' in different quantum states to its companion resonator, using methods that we established many years ago," Cleland said.
"We then turn on the coupling of the resonator to the transmission line, releasing the (possibly complex) quantum state from the resonator into the transmission line, where it is transmitted as a (possibly complex) set of entangled mobile photons. Those are then 'caught' by the other resonator using the reverse of the release process, and we use that resonator's qubit to analyze the received state. The system can transmit in either direction equally well (thus 'bidirectional')."
