Cold atomic ensembles as quantum antennas for distributed networks of single-atom arrays
Cold atomic ensembles as quantum antennas for distributed networks of single-atom arrays
Single neutral atoms in optical tweezer arrays offer a promising platform for high-fidelity quantum computing at local nodes. Nonetheless, creating entanglement between remote nodes in a distributed quantum network remains challenging due to inherently weak atom-light coupling. Here, we design a distributed quantum network architecture in which cold atomic ensembles with strong atom-light interactions act as quantum antennas, interfacing single-atom qubits with flying photons to enable high-efficiency atom-photon entanglement generation -- analogous to the role of antennas in classical communication. Using realistic experimental parameters, we estimate an efficiency of $η\simeq 0.548$ for generating atom-photon entanglement, a probability of $P_{E} \simeq 6 \%$ for generating atom-atom entanglement, and a remote entanglement generation rate of $16.6 $ kHz. This performance not only surpasses that of state-of-the-art cavity-based or high-numerical-aperture-lens-based architectures but also offers notable advantages in simplicity, tunability, and experimental accessibility. Our scheme also integrates a long-lived quantum memory, providing a storage advantage for quantum repeater design. By leveraging the complementary strengths of single-atom qubits for local operations and cold atomic ensembles for networking, this approach paves the way for scalable distributed quantum computing and sensing.
Xiaoshui Lin、Yefeng Mei、Chuanwei Zhang
光电子技术电子技术应用
Xiaoshui Lin,Yefeng Mei,Chuanwei Zhang.Cold atomic ensembles as quantum antennas for distributed networks of single-atom arrays[EB/OL].(2025-08-11)[2025-08-24].https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.08439.点此复制
评论