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Certification of a non-projective qudit measurement using multiport beamsplitters

2023, Martínez, Daniel, Gómez, Esteban, Cariñe-Catrileo, Jaime, Pereira, Luciano, Delgado, Aldo, Walborn, Stephen, Tavakoli, Armin, Lima, Gustavo

The most common form of measurement in quantum mechanics projects a wavefunction onto orthogonal states that correspond to definite outcomes. However, generalized quantum measurements that do not fully project quantum states are possible and have an important role in quantum information tasks. Unfortunately, it is difficult to certify that an experiment harvests the advantages made possible by generalized measurements, especially beyond the simplest two-level qubit system. Here we show that multiport beamsplitters allow for the robust realization of high-quality generalized measurements in higher-dimensional systems with more than two levels. Using multicore optical fibre technology, we implement a seven-outcome generalized measurement in a four-dimensional Hilbert space with a fidelity of 99.7%. We present a practical quantum communication task and demonstrate a success rate that cannot be simulated in any conceivable quantum protocol based on standard projective measurements on quantum messages of the same dimension. Our approach, which is compatible with modern photonic platforms, showcases an avenue for faithful and high-quality implementation of genuinely non-projective quantum measurements beyond qubit systems.

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Computational advantage from the quantum superposition of multiple temporal orders of photonic gates

2021, Taddei, Márcio M., Cariñe-Catrileo, Jaime, Martínez, Daniel, García, Tania, Guerrero, Nayda, Abbott, Alastair A., Araújo, Mateus, Branciard, Cyril, Gómez, Esteban S., Walborn, Stephen P., Aolita, Leandro, Lima, Gustavo

Models for quantum computation with circuit connections subject to the quantum superposition principle have recently been proposed. In them, a control quantum system can coherently determine the order in which a target quantum system undergoes N gate operations. This process, known as the quantum N-switch, is a resource for several information-processing tasks. In particular, it provides a computational advantage—over fixed-gate-order quantum circuits—for phase-estimation problems involving N unknown unitary gates. However, the corresponding algorithm requires an experimentally unfeasible target-system dimension (super)exponential in N. Here, we introduce a promise problem for which the quantum N-switch gives an equivalent computational speedup with target-system dimension as small as 2 regardless of N. We use state-of-the-art multicore optical-fiber technology to experimentally demonstrate the quantum N-switch with N = 4 gates acting on a photonic-polarization qubit. This is the first observation of a quantum superposition of more than N = 2 temporal orders, demonstrating its usefulness for efficient phase estimation.