Publications by authors named "Jun-Ichi Yoshikawa"

Article Synopsis
  • Cloud optical quantum computing benefits from a fiber-based system, which avoids the need for spatial alignment but faces challenges like phase drifts and polarization fluctuations due to environmental conditions.* -
  • The study presents a successful measurement of squeezed light using a fiber system over 24 hours, utilizing stabilization techniques to reduce instabilities and an integrated controller for automatic alignment.* -
  • The results show consistent squeezing levels of -4.42 dB with minimal variation, indicating that this technology could enable the development of complex optical setups for long-term operation in quantum computing cloud services.*
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Measurement-based quantum computation with optical time-domain multiplexing is a promising method to realize a quantum computer from the viewpoint of scalability. Fault tolerance and universality are also realizable by preparing appropriate resource quantum states and electro-optical feedforward that is altered based on measurement results. While linear feedforward has been realized and become a common experimental technique, nonlinear feedforward was unrealized until now.

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Article Synopsis
  • Optical quantum information processing needs efficient interference of quantum light, but using optical fibers can reduce this interference due to polarization issues.
  • * The proposed method optimizes interference visibility by controlling polarizations along two circular paths on the Poincaré sphere, using fiber stretchers as polarization controllers.
  • * Experimental results show this method maintains over 99.9% visibility for three hours with only 0.02 dB (0.5%) optical loss, enhancing the feasibility of fiber systems for practical optical quantum computers.*
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Controlling the temporal waveform of light is the key to a versatile light source in classical and quantum electronics. Although pulse shaping of classical light is mature and has been used in various fields, more advanced applications would be realized by a light source that generates arbitrary quantum light with arbitrary temporal waveforms. We call such a device a quantum arbitrary waveform generator (Q-AWG).

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Telecommunication wavelength with well-developed optical communication technologies and low losses in the waveguide are advantageous for quantum applications. However, an experimental generation of non-classical states called non-Gaussian states at the telecommunication wavelength is still underdeveloped. Here, we generate highly-pure-single-photon states, one of the most primitive non-Gaussian states, by using a heralding scheme with an optical parametric oscillator and a superconducting nano-strip photon detector.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Non-Gaussian states are crucial for advancing optical quantum technologies, and the Optical Quantum State Synthesizer (OQSS) is a promising method for their preparation using Gaussian inputs and linear optics.
  • - A major challenge is the complexity of simulating the state preparation on classical computers, making it tough to generate essential non-Gaussian states for quantum processing.
  • - The authors propose a backcasting approach to simplify the OQSS design, simulating it layer by layer from the final output back to the beginning, which can also limit the photon detection requirements to a maximum of 2 photons.
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Continuous-wave (CW) squeezed light is used in the generation of various optical quantum states, and thus is a fundamental resource of fault-tolerant universal quantum computation using optical continuous variables. To realize a practical quantum computer, a waveguide optical parametric amplifier (OPA) is an attractive CW squeezed light source in terms of its THz-order bandwidth and suitability for modularization. The usages of a waveguide OPA in quantum applications thus far, however, are limited due to the difficulty of the generation of the squeezed light with a high purity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Optical quantum computation needs carefully created multimode photonic quantum states to function effectively.
  • The study shows the successful phase locking of two all-optical quantum memories, which allows for the precise timing of releasing two-mode entangled single-photon states.
  • The released states maintain their entanglement and nonclassical properties even with release-time differences of up to 400 nanoseconds, validated through advanced measurement techniques.
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Entanglement is the key resource for measurement-based quantum computing. It is stored in quantum states known as cluster states, which are prepared offline and enable quantum computing by means of purely local measurements. Universal quantum computing requires cluster states that are both large and possess (at least) a two-dimensional topology.

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We experimentally demonstrate storage and on-demand release of phase-sensitive, photon-number superposition states of the form α|0⟩+βe^{iθ}|1⟩ for an optical quantized oscillator mode. For this purpose, we newly developed a phase-probing mechanism compatible with a storage system composed of two concatenated optical cavities, which was previously employed for storage of phase-insensitive single-photon states [Phys. Rev.

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We propose a method to subtract a photon from a double sideband mode of continuous-wave light. The central idea is to use phase modulation as a frequency sideband beam splitter in the heralding photon subtraction scheme, where a small portion of the sideband mode is down-converted to 0 Hz to provide a trigger photon. An optical cat state is created by applying the proposed method to a squeezed state at 500 MHz sideband, which is generated by an optical parametric oscillator.

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We report a 65 MHz-bandwidth triangular-shaped optical parametric oscillator (OPO) for squeezed vacuum generation at 860 nm. The triangle structure of our OPO enables the round-trip length to reach 45 mm as a ring cavity, which provides a counter circulating optical path available for introducing a probe beam or generating another squeezed vacuum. Hence our OPO is suitable for the applications in high-speed quantum information processing where two or more squeezed vacua form a complicated interferometer, like continuous-variable quantum teleportation.

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A fundamental element of quantum information processing with photonic qubits is the nonclassical quantum interference between two photons when they bunch together via the Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) effect. Ultimately, many such photons must be processed in complex interferometric networks. For this purpose, it is essential to synchronize the arrival times of the flying photons and to keep their purities high.

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Real-time controls based on quantum measurements are powerful tools for various quantum protocols. However, their experimental realization has been limited by mode mismatch between the temporal mode of quadrature measurement and that heralded by photon detection. Here, we demonstrate real-time quadrature measurement of a single-photon wave packet induced by photon detection by utilizing continuous temporal-mode matching between homodyne detection and an exponentially rising temporal mode.

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We experimentally demonstrate the noiseless teleportation of a single photon by conditioning on quadrature Bell measurement results near the origin in phase space and thereby circumventing the photon loss that otherwise occurs even in optimal gain-tuned continuous-variable quantum teleportation. In general, thanks to this loss suppression, the noiseless conditional teleportation can preserve the negativity of the Wigner function for an arbitrary pure input state and an arbitrary pure entangled resource state. In our experiment, the positive value of the Wigner function at the origin for the unconditional output state, W(0,0)=0.

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We implement the squeezing operation as a genuine quantum gate, deterministically and reversibly acting "online" upon an input state no longer restricted to the set of Gaussian states. More specifically, by applying an efficient and robust squeezing operation for the first time to non-Gaussian states, we demonstrate a two-way conversion between a particlelike single-photon state and a wavelike superposition of coherent states. Our squeezing gate is reliable enough to preserve the negativities of the corresponding Wigner functions.

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We experimentally demonstrate a controlled-phase gate for continuous variables using a cluster-state resource of four optical modes. The two independent input states of the gate are coupled with the cluster in a teleportation-based fashion. As a result, one of the entanglement links present in the initial cluster state appears in the two unmeasured output modes as the corresponding entangling gate acting on the input states.

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One-way quantum computation is a very promising candidate to fulfill the capabilities of quantum information processing. Here we demonstrate an important set of unitary operations for continuous variables using a linear cluster state of four entangled optical modes. These operations are performed in a fully measurement-controlled and completely unconditional fashion.

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The sum gate is the canonical two-mode gate for universal quantum computation based on continuous quantum variables. It represents the natural analogue to a qubit C-NOT gate. In addition, the continuous-variable gate describes a quantum nondemolition (QND) interaction between the quadrature components of two light modes.

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