Integrated Photonic Multiplexing for Quantum Information
Author(s)
Primary Supervisor
Lobino, Mirko
Litvinyuk, Igor
Year published
2018-07
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Herewithin we present multiplexed integrated photonics as a realisable route to large-scale quantum technologies. Quantum photonics is one many platforms for experimental demonstrations of quantum information science. The technological advantages afforded by the combination of integrated photonic circuits with multiplexing techniques can enable performance enhancements to make photonics a leading infrastructure for implementation of real-world quantum information systems.
For this purpose, we create integrated circuits to solve technical challenges in the fields of quantum cryptography, discrete variable and continuous ...
View more >Herewithin we present multiplexed integrated photonics as a realisable route to large-scale quantum technologies. Quantum photonics is one many platforms for experimental demonstrations of quantum information science. The technological advantages afforded by the combination of integrated photonic circuits with multiplexing techniques can enable performance enhancements to make photonics a leading infrastructure for implementation of real-world quantum information systems. For this purpose, we create integrated circuits to solve technical challenges in the fields of quantum cryptography, discrete variable and continuous variable quantum computation. These circuits were fabricated in a facility developed at Griffith University, Centre for Quantum Dynamics, for the production of annealed and reverse proton exchange waveguides in congruent lithium niobate and have found applications across the fields of quantum optics and cryptography. We develop and demonstrate the first integrated many-mode active optical demultiplexing of single photons from a solid-state source. This scheme enables the production of a multiphoton Fock state across multiple spatial modes from a single high brightness solid-state source with temporal indistinguishability. This work addressed a major hurdle in the development of photonic quantum computers, namely generation of a large number of indistinguishable single photons on demand. To perform the demultiplexing of single photons we develop two key technologies; a high-speed 1:4 integrated photonic switch and a many channel arbitrary pulse sequence generator. Cryptography as a field is increasingly reliant on quantum random number generators for added security. With increased demand comes a requirement for higher bitrate random number generators, and as such we demonstrate multiplexing of a random number generation scheme based on measurements of quantum vacuum fluctuations. Furthermore, we show an increased level of security at high bitrates by implementing a new signal processing scheme We demonstrate integrated generation, manipulation and homodyning of squeezed light on a single chip for the first time. This scheme is the first successful demonstration of full integration of all the major components needed for continuous variable quantum computation in a temporally multiplexed architecture. These results represent contributions to several fields of study, demonstrating the advantages of integrated quantum photonic multiplexing, and are of interest to the quantum computing, information security, integrated optics, and electronic control communities.
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View more >Herewithin we present multiplexed integrated photonics as a realisable route to large-scale quantum technologies. Quantum photonics is one many platforms for experimental demonstrations of quantum information science. The technological advantages afforded by the combination of integrated photonic circuits with multiplexing techniques can enable performance enhancements to make photonics a leading infrastructure for implementation of real-world quantum information systems. For this purpose, we create integrated circuits to solve technical challenges in the fields of quantum cryptography, discrete variable and continuous variable quantum computation. These circuits were fabricated in a facility developed at Griffith University, Centre for Quantum Dynamics, for the production of annealed and reverse proton exchange waveguides in congruent lithium niobate and have found applications across the fields of quantum optics and cryptography. We develop and demonstrate the first integrated many-mode active optical demultiplexing of single photons from a solid-state source. This scheme enables the production of a multiphoton Fock state across multiple spatial modes from a single high brightness solid-state source with temporal indistinguishability. This work addressed a major hurdle in the development of photonic quantum computers, namely generation of a large number of indistinguishable single photons on demand. To perform the demultiplexing of single photons we develop two key technologies; a high-speed 1:4 integrated photonic switch and a many channel arbitrary pulse sequence generator. Cryptography as a field is increasingly reliant on quantum random number generators for added security. With increased demand comes a requirement for higher bitrate random number generators, and as such we demonstrate multiplexing of a random number generation scheme based on measurements of quantum vacuum fluctuations. Furthermore, we show an increased level of security at high bitrates by implementing a new signal processing scheme We demonstrate integrated generation, manipulation and homodyning of squeezed light on a single chip for the first time. This scheme is the first successful demonstration of full integration of all the major components needed for continuous variable quantum computation in a temporally multiplexed architecture. These results represent contributions to several fields of study, demonstrating the advantages of integrated quantum photonic multiplexing, and are of interest to the quantum computing, information security, integrated optics, and electronic control communities.
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Thesis Type
Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
Degree Program
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
School
School of Environment and Sc
Copyright Statement
The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
Subject
Photonic multiplexing
Quantum information
Information systems
Quantum cryptography
Lithium niobate
Quantum computation