On-chip spin-photon entanglement based on photon-scattering of a quantum dot

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Abstract

The realization of on-chip quantum interfaces between flying photons and solid-state spins is a key building block for quantum-information processors, enabling, e.g., distributed quantum computing, where remote quantum registers are interconnected by flying photons. Self-assembled quantum dots integrated into nanostructures are one of the most promising systems for such an endeavor thanks to their near-unity photon-emitter coupling and fast spontaneous emission rate. Here we demonstrate high-fidelity on-chip entanglement between an incoming photon and a stationary quantum-dot hole spin qubit. The entanglement is induced by sequential scattering of the time-bin encoded photon interleaved with active spin control within a microsecond, two orders of magnitude faster than those achieved in other solid-state platforms. Conditioning on the detection of a reflected photon renders the entanglement fidelity immune to the spectral wandering of the emitter. These results represent a major step towards realizing a quantum node capable of interchanging information with flying photons and on-chip quantum logic, as required for quantum networks and quantum repeaters.

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Chan, M. L., Tiranov, A., Appel, M. H., Wang, Y., Midolo, L., Scholz, S., … Lodahl, P. (2023). On-chip spin-photon entanglement based on photon-scattering of a quantum dot. Npj Quantum Information, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-023-00717-5

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