Table of Contents
- Introduction
- What Are Photonic Qubits?
- Quantum Properties of Light
- Qubit Encodings in Photons
- Polarization Encoding
- Path Encoding
- Time-Bin and Frequency Encoding
- Advantages of Photonic Qubits
- Challenges in Photonic Quantum Computing
- Single-Photon Sources
- Entangled Photon Pair Generation
- Beam Splitters and Interference
- Mach-Zehnder and Hong-Ou-Mandel Interference
- Linear Optical Quantum Computing (LOQC)
- Knill-Laflamme-Milburn (KLM) Scheme
- Measurement-Based Quantum Computation
- Quantum Gates with Photons
- Quantum Teleportation with Photons
- Quantum Repeaters and Photonic Networks
- Integration on Photonic Chips
- Quantum Key Distribution with Photons
- Photonic Quantum Simulators
- Commercial and Research Efforts
- Scalability Prospects and Future Directions
- Conclusion
1. Introduction
Photonic qubits use individual photons — the fundamental particles of light — to encode and process quantum information. Due to their low decoherence and ability to travel long distances, photons are ideal for quantum communication and emerging quantum computing architectures.
2. What Are Photonic Qubits?
Photonic qubits represent quantum information through light-based degrees of freedom. These systems can:
- Maintain quantum coherence for long durations
- Transmit information across optical fibers or free space
- Be manipulated using passive and active optical components
3. Quantum Properties of Light
Key quantum features enabling computation with photons:
- Superposition of polarization, path, or time-bin states
- Entanglement between photons
- Indistinguishability and interference
4. Qubit Encodings in Photons
Information is typically encoded in:
- Polarization states: \( |H\rangle, |V\rangle \)
- Spatial modes (path): two distinct paths
- Time-bin or frequency: early vs late photon arrival or different frequencies
5. Polarization Encoding
State | Description |
---|---|
\( |H\rangle \) | Horizontal polarization |
\( |V\rangle \) | Vertical polarization |
\( \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|H\rangle + |V\rangle) \) | Diagonal (superposition) |
Implemented using:
- Wave plates
- Polarizing beam splitters
- Single-photon detectors
6. Path Encoding
A single photon split between two spatial modes:
\[
|0\rangle = \text{Path A}, \quad |1\rangle = \text{Path B}
\]
Controlled using beam splitters, mirrors, and phase shifters.
7. Time-Bin and Frequency Encoding
Time-bin encoding:
- Use early and late pulses to define \( |0\rangle \) and \( |1\rangle \)
- Maintains robustness in long-distance communication
Frequency encoding:
- Use two frequencies of a single photon as basis states
8. Advantages of Photonic Qubits
- Room temperature operation
- High-speed communication
- Long coherence times
- Compatibility with optical fibers and photonic chips
9. Challenges in Photonic Quantum Computing
- Difficulty in creating deterministic photon-photon interactions
- Low efficiency of photon generation and detection
- Need for probabilistic gates and post-selection in LOQC
10. Single-Photon Sources
Essential for scalable quantum optics:
- Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC)
- Quantum dots
- Defect centers in diamond
Ideal source must be:
- On-demand
- Bright
- Indistinguishable photons
11. Entangled Photon Pair Generation
Produced via:
- Type-II SPDC in nonlinear crystals
- Waveguide-integrated SPDC
- Quantum dot cascade emission
Used in teleportation, QKD, and multi-photon entanglement.
12. Beam Splitters and Interference
Beam splitters are core components:
- Enable superposition and interference
- Facilitate entanglement and measurement-based gates
13. Mach-Zehnder and Hong-Ou-Mandel Interference
Hong-Ou-Mandel effect:
- Two identical photons entering a beam splitter will “bunch” into the same output port:
\[
|1\rangle_A |1\rangle_B \rightarrow \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|2\rangle_C |0\rangle_D + |0\rangle_C |2\rangle_D)
\]
Used to test indistinguishability and create entanglement.
14. Linear Optical Quantum Computing (LOQC)
Computing with photons using only:
- Beam splitters
- Phase shifters
- Photon detectors
- Feed-forward logic
Pioneered by the Knill-Laflamme-Milburn (KLM) protocol.
15. Knill-Laflamme-Milburn (KLM) Scheme
- Uses ancilla photons and projective measurements
- Enables universal quantum computation
- But probabilistic and resource-intensive
16. Measurement-Based Quantum Computation
Also known as cluster-state computing:
- Create large entangled states (cluster states)
- Perform computation by adaptive measurements
Well-suited for photonic platforms due to ease of entanglement distribution.
17. Quantum Gates with Photons
- Hadamard, Z, X gates via waveplates and interferometers
- Controlled-Z or CNOT gates via entanglement and post-selection
- Nonlinear media may offer future deterministic gates
18. Quantum Teleportation with Photons
Photons are ideal carriers for teleportation:
- Source generates entangled pair
- Bell-state measurement collapses system
- Receiver applies Pauli operation
19. Quantum Repeaters and Photonic Networks
Used to extend quantum communication over long distances:
- Quantum repeaters correct losses
- Entanglement swapping and memory interfaces needed for scalability
20. Integration on Photonic Chips
Efforts to miniaturize optics:
- Silicon photonics and lithium niobate platforms
- Integrated sources, modulators, and detectors
- Compact, scalable, and stable architectures
21. Quantum Key Distribution with Photons
Backbone of modern QKD systems:
- BB84, E91, and decoy-state protocols use photon polarization or phase
- Secured by quantum no-cloning and disturbance detection
22. Photonic Quantum Simulators
Used to simulate physical phenomena:
- Boson sampling
- Molecular energy spectra
- Quantum walks and topological effects
23. Commercial and Research Efforts
- Xanadu (Canada): Borealis photonic processor
- PsiQuantum: Silicon photonic quantum computer
- Toshiba, ID Quantique: QKD hardware
- Multiple university-led efforts on integrated optics
24. Scalability Prospects and Future Directions
- Deterministic photon sources
- Quantum error correction with bosonic codes
- On-chip nonlinear optics
- Fusion with telecom infrastructure
25. Conclusion
Photonic qubits offer unique advantages in transmission, coherence, and room-temperature operation. Though challenges remain in deterministic interaction and scalability, advances in integrated optics and quantum photonics are paving the way toward scalable, networked, and secure quantum systems. Photons will undoubtedly play a key role in the future of both quantum computing and communication.