Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Metropolitan Single-Photon Distribution at 1550 nm for Random Number Generation

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

Quantum communication networks are used for QKD and metrological applications. We present research connecting two nodes ≈ 20 kilometers apart over the municipal fiber network using semiconductor quantum dots emitting at 1550 nm.

© 2023 The Author(s)

PDF Article  |   Presentation Video
More Like This
Metropolitan Single-Photon Distribution at 1550 nm for Random Number Generation

Samuel Gyger, Katharina D. Zeuner, Thomas Lettner, Sandra Bensoussan, Martin Carlnäs, Liselott Ekemar, Lucas Schweickert, Carl Reuterskiöld Hedlund, Mattias Hammar, Tigge Nilsson, Jonas Almlöf, Stephan Steinhauer, Gemma Vall Llosera, and Val Zwiller
FM1A.3 CLEO: Fundamental Science (CLEO:FS) 2023

Daylight quantum key distribution in a free-space channel using entangled photons emitted by a quantum dot device

F. Basso Basset, M. Valeri, J. Neuwirth, E. Polino, M. B. Rota, D. Poderini, C. Pardo, G. Rodari, E. Roccia, S. F. Covre da Silva, G. Ronco, N. Spagnolo, A. Rastelli, G. Carvacho, F. Sciarrino, and R. Trotta
eb_5_3 European Quantum Electronics Conference (EQEC) 2023

Enhancing quantum network security with quantum dot single-photon sources

Michal Vyvlecka, Mathieu Bozzio, Lennart Jehle, Cornelius Nawrath, Michael Cosacchi, Francesco Giorgino, Tim Seidelmann, Juan C. Loredo, Simone Luca Portalupi, Vollrath Martin Axt, Peter Michler, and Philip Walther
QTh3B.6 Quantum 2.0 (QUANTUM) 2023

Presentation Video

Presentation video access is available to:

  1. Optica Publishing Group subscribers
  2. Technical meeting attendees
  3. Optica members who wish to use one of their free downloads. Please download the article first. After downloading, please refresh this page.

Contact your librarian or system administrator
or
Log in to access Optica Member Subscription or free downloads


More Like This
Metropolitan Single-Photon Distribution at 1550 nm for Random Number Generation

Samuel Gyger, Katharina D. Zeuner, Thomas Lettner, Sandra Bensoussan, Martin Carlnäs, Liselott Ekemar, Lucas Schweickert, Carl Reuterskiöld Hedlund, Mattias Hammar, Tigge Nilsson, Jonas Almlöf, Stephan Steinhauer, Gemma Vall Llosera, and Val Zwiller
FM1A.3 CLEO: Fundamental Science (CLEO:FS) 2023

Daylight quantum key distribution in a free-space channel using entangled photons emitted by a quantum dot device

F. Basso Basset, M. Valeri, J. Neuwirth, E. Polino, M. B. Rota, D. Poderini, C. Pardo, G. Rodari, E. Roccia, S. F. Covre da Silva, G. Ronco, N. Spagnolo, A. Rastelli, G. Carvacho, F. Sciarrino, and R. Trotta
eb_5_3 European Quantum Electronics Conference (EQEC) 2023

Enhancing quantum network security with quantum dot single-photon sources

Michal Vyvlecka, Mathieu Bozzio, Lennart Jehle, Cornelius Nawrath, Michael Cosacchi, Francesco Giorgino, Tim Seidelmann, Juan C. Loredo, Simone Luca Portalupi, Vollrath Martin Axt, Peter Michler, and Philip Walther
QTh3B.6 Quantum 2.0 (QUANTUM) 2023

Long-Distance High-Dimensional Quantum Key Distribution Field Test Using Energy-Time Entanglement

Jingyuan Liu, Zhihao Lin, Dongning Liu, Xue Feng, Fang Liu, Kaiyu Cui, Yidong Huang, and Wei Zhang
QW3A.3 Quantum 2.0 (QUANTUM) 2023

Dark Current and Single Photon Detection by 1550 nm Avalanche Photodiodes: Dead Time Corrected Probability Distributions

Nicole Menkart, Joseph D. Hart, Thomas E. Murphy, and Rajarshi Roy
QW2A.11 Quantum 2.0 (QUANTUM) 2023

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.