Publication | Open Access
Quantum nonlinear optics without photons
78
Citations
71
References
2017
Year
Quantum PhotonicsEngineeringNonlinear OpticsSpontaneous Parametric Down-conversionQuantum ComputingQuantum EntanglementQuantum OpticsQuantum Nonlinear OpticsPhotonicsQuantum SciencePhysicsQuantum DeviceQuantum InformationQuantum Repetition CodesQuantum OpticNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsQuantum DevicesQuantum Photonic Device
Spontaneous parametric down-conversion is a well-known process in quantum nonlinear optics in which a photon incident on a nonlinear crystal spontaneously splits into two photons. Here we propose an analogous physical process where one excited atom directly transfers its excitation to a pair of spatially separated atoms with probability approaching 1. The interaction is mediated by the exchange of virtual rather than real photons. This nonlinear atomic process is coherent and reversible, so the pair of excited atoms can transfer the excitation back to the first one: the atomic analog of sum-frequency generation of light. The parameters used to investigate this process correspond to experimentally demonstrated values in ultrastrong circuit quantum electrodynamics. This approach can be extended to realize other nonlinear interatomic processes, such as four-atom mixing, and is an attractive architecture for the realization of quantum devices on a chip. We show that four-qubit mixing can efficiently implement quantum repetition codes and, thus, can be used for error-correction codes.
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