Abstract
Hybrid light-matter networks offer the promise for delivering robust quantum information processing technologies, from sensor arrays to quantum simulators. New waveguide-based sources, detectors and memories illustrate progress towards build a resilient, scalable photonic quantum network.
© 2017 IEEE
PDF ArticleMore Like This
I. A. Walmsley, J. Nunn, B. J. Smith, W. S. Kolthammer, D. Saunders, B. J. Metcalf, S. Barz, J. Renema, A. Eckstein, P. Ledingham, A. Feizpour, E. Poem, B. Brecht, H. Chrzanowski, P. C. Humphreys, W. Clements, K. Kazcmarek, J. H. D. Munns, C. Qiu, M. R. Sprague, J. C. Gates, and Peter G. R. Smith
FTu5G.2 Frontiers in Optics (FiO) 2016
I. A. Walmsley, J. Nunn, B. J. Smith, W. S. Kolthammer, D. Saunders, B. J. Metcalf, S. Barz, J. Renema, A. Eckstein, P. Ledingham, A. Feizpour, E. Poem, B. Brecht, H. Chrzanowski, P. C. Humphreys, W. Clements, K. Kazcmarek, J. H. D. Munns, C. Qiu, J. C. Gates, and P. G. R. Smith.
14p_C302_1 JSAP-OSA Joint Symposia (JSAP) 2016
I. A. Walmsley, B. J. Metcalf, J. B. Spring, P. C. Humphreys, M. Barbieri, W. S. Kolthammer, J. C. Gates, and P. G. R. Smith
JSV_3_1 European Quantum Electronics Conference (EQEC) 2015