Temporal trapping: a route to strong coupling and deterministic optical quantum computation

Abstract

The realization of deterministic photon–photon gates is a central goal in optical quantum computation and engineering. A longstanding challenge is that optical nonlinearities in scalable, room-temperature material platforms are too weak to achieve the required strong coupling, due to the critical loss-confinement trade-off in existing photonic structures. In this work, we introduce a spatio-temporal confinement method, dispersion-engineered temporal trapping, to circumvent the trade-off, enabling a route to all-optical strong coupling. Temporal confinement is imposed by an auxiliary trap pulse via cross-phase modulation, which, combined with the spatial confinement of a waveguide, creates a “flying cavity” that enhances the nonlinear interaction strength by at least an order of magnitude. Numerical simulations confirm that temporal trapping confines the multimode nonlinear dynamics to a single-mode subspace, enabling high-fidelity deterministic quantum gate operations. With realistic dispersion engineering and loss figures, we show that temporally trapped ultrashort pulses could achieve strong coupling on near-term nonlinear nanophotonic platforms. Our results highlight the potential of ultrafast nonlinear optics to become the first scalable, high-bandwidth, and room-temperature platform that achieves strong coupling, opening a path to quantum computing, simulation, and light sources.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Nov 17, 2022
Source ID
10.1364/optica.473276

Entities

People

  • Edwin Ng
  • Hideo Mabuchi
  • Marc Jankowski
  • Ryan Hamerly
  • Ryotatsu Yanagimoto

Organizations

  • Army Research Office
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • National Science Foundation
  • Stanford University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Integrated Circuit Design and Technology.
  • Operations Research
  • Optical Physics and Photonics.

Technology Areas

  • Quantum Computing
  • Quantum Science - Quantum Dots