Together with an international team of researchers from the Universities of Southern California, Central Florida, Pennsylvania State and Saint Louis, physicists from the University of Rostock have developed a novel mechanism to safeguard a key resource in quantum photonics: optical entanglement. Their discovery is published in Science.
Declared as the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology by the United Nations, 2025 marks 100 years since the initial development of quantum mechanics. As this strange and beautiful description of nature on the smallest scales continues to fascinate and puzzle physicists, its quite tangible implications form the basis of modern technology as well as material science, and are currently in the process of revolutionizing information science and communications.
A key resource to quantum computation is so-called entanglement, which underpins the protocols and algorithms that make quantum computers exponentially more powerful than their classical predecessors. Moreover, entanglement allows for the secure distribution of encryption keys, and entangled photons provide increased sensitivity and noise resilience that dramatically exceed the classical limit.
Yet, entanglement is a delicate property and can easily be lost due to decoherence arising from perturbations such as thermal noise, and reliably preserving the entangled portion of an arbitrary input state is one of the central challenges in quantum technologies.
The team approached this formidable task by harnessing the complex light dynamics in photonic circuits. Placed in close proximity to one another, such “photonic wires” do not only guide light along pre-defined paths, but also allow photons to “jump” between neighboring lanes.
By fine-tuning this coupling to conform to so-called anti-parity-time symmetry, the researchers managed to selectively remove the non-entangled components of arbitrary input states. Implemented on a lossless photonic network, their newly-devised entanglement filter achieves near-unity fidelity under single- and two-photon excitation and is scalable to higher photon levels, remaining robust against decoherence during propagation.
These findings open up a promising path in quantum photonics, eliminating the need for absorbing or amplifying materials.
Ultimately, by enabling the on-demand generation of entangled photons and the non-destructive purification of entanglement on a compact optical chip, this work sets the stage for advanced quantum technologies to be developed on integrated platforms.
More information:
Mahmoud A. Selim et al, Selective filtering of photonic quantum entanglement via anti–parity-time symmetry, Science (2025). DOI: 10.1126/science.adu3777. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adu3777
Provided by
University of Rostock
Citation:
Newly developed waveguide device protects photonic quantum computers from errors (2025, March 27)