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Experimental Single-Copy Entanglement Distillation

Sebastian Ecker, Philipp Sohr, Lukas Bulla, Marcus Huber, Martin Bohmann, Rupert Ursin

2021Physical Review Letters92 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The phenomenon of entanglement marks one of the furthest departures from classical physics and is indispensable for quantum information processing. Despite its fundamental importance, the distribution of entanglement over long distances through photons is unfortunately hindered by unavoidable decoherence effects. Entanglement distillation is a means of restoring the quality of such diluted entanglement by concentrating it into a pair of qubits. Conventionally, this would be done by distributing multiple photon pairs and distilling the entanglement into a single pair. Here, we turn around this paradigm by utilizing pairs of single photons entangled in multiple degrees of freedom. Specifically, we make use of the polarization and the energy-time domain of photons, both of which are extensively field tested. We experimentally chart the domain of distillable states and achieve relative fidelity gains up to 13.8%. Compared to the two-copy scheme, the distillation rate of our single-copy scheme is several orders of magnitude higher, paving the way towards high-capacity and noise-resilient quantum networks.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum entanglementEntanglement distillationQuantum decoherencePhysicsPhoton entanglementPhotonQubitQuantum mechanicsQuantum teleportationSquashed entanglementDistillationMultipartite entanglementStatistical physicsQuantumQuantum networkChemistryOrganic chemistryQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
Experimental Single-Copy Entanglement Distillation | Litcius