ArXiv TLDR

A Modular Cryogenic Link for Microwave Quantum Communication Over Distances of Tens of Meters

🐦 Tweet
2604.15971

Josua D. Schär, Simon Storz, Paul Magnard, Philipp Kurpiers, Janis Lütolf + 4 more

quant-phcond-mat.mes-hall

TLDR

A modular cryogenic link for microwave quantum communication over tens of meters is demonstrated, enabling distributed quantum computing and non-local quantum tests.

Key contributions

  • Developed a modular cryogenic link for microwave quantum communication over distances up to 30 meters.
  • Connects two superconducting circuit systems in separate dilution refrigerators at below 50 mK.
  • Utilized a thermal model to optimize design and material selection for the cryogenic link.
  • Enables distributed quantum computing and communication algorithms, including loophole-free Bell tests.

Why it matters

This paper addresses a critical challenge in scaling quantum technologies by providing a hardware solution for connecting spatially separated superconducting circuits. It enables the development of local area quantum networks, facilitating distributed quantum computing and communication, and advancing fundamental quantum science with non-locality experiments.

Original Abstract

Quantum technologies promise a radically new way to solve classically intractable computing problems. Superconducting circuits as a platform are at the forefront of this field. The cryogenic operation temperatures of superconducting circuits however impose challenges for the further scaling to many connected quantum information processing units into a local area or global network. In this work, we present a hardware solution for connecting quantum devices operating at microwave frequencies into local area networks, which enable the exchange of quantum information between spatially separated parties. Specifically, we demonstrate a modular system spanning distances of 5, 10 and 30 meters operated at cryogenic temperatures and connecting two superconducting circuit systems, located in individual dilution refrigerators, through a quantum communication channel. We develop a thermal model to evaluate the heat transfer processes in the setup, optimize the design and select appropriate materials for its construction. The assembled 30-meter-long system achieves operating temperatures of below 50 mK after a cooldown time of about six and a half days. This link enables the execution of distributed quantum computing and communication algorithms. It also adds the resource of non-locality, certified by a loophole-free Bell test, to the field of quantum science and technology with superconducting circuits.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.