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Displaying 101 - 109 of 109

Long-distance entanglement-based quantum key distribution over optical fiber

November 10, 2008
Author(s)
Toshimori Honjo, Sae Woo Nam, Hiroki Takesue, Qiang Zhang, H. Kamada, Y. Nishida, O. Tadanaga, M. Asobe, Burm Baek, Robert Hadfield, Shigehito Miki, Mikio Fujiwara, Masahide Sasaki, Z. Wang, K. Inoue, Yoshihisa Yamamoto
We report the first entanglement-based quantum key distribution (QKD) experiment over a 100-km optical fiber. We used superconducting single photon detectors based on NbN nanowires that provide high-speed single photon detection for the 1.5-υm telecom band

Spectrally Bright and Broad Fiber-Based Heralded Single-Photon Source

July 29, 2008
Author(s)
Elizabeth A. Goldschmidt, M D. Eisaman, Jingyun Fan, Sergey V. Polyakov, Alan L. Migdall
We present the first experimental characterization of a heralded single-photon source based on spontaneous four-wave-mixing in a single-mode microstructure fiber. We measure the second-order correlation function, g(2)(0), to be far below the classical

High-efficiency, ultra-low-noise all-fiber photon pair source

June 20, 2008
Author(s)
Shellee D. Dyer, Martin J. Stevens, Burm Baek, Sae Woo Nam
We demonstrate an all-fiber photon pair source with the highest coincidence-to-accidental ratio (CAR) reported to date in the fiber optic telecom C-band. We achieve this through careful optimization of pair production efficiency as well as careful

Tungsten Transition-Edge Sensors for IR/Optical/UV Photon Counting

June 1, 2003
Author(s)
Aaron J. Miller, Sae Woo Nam, John M. Martinis, Alexander V. Sergienko
Tungsten transition-edge sensors have been demonstrated to have impressive photon-counting capabilities. Of particular interest is the expected impact to the applications of low-flux astronomy and photonic quantum information. The combination of high

Quantum Computing and Communication

June 28, 2002
Author(s)
Paul E. Black, David R. Kuhn, Carl J. Williams
A quantum computer, if built, will be to an ordinary computer as a hydrogen bomb is to gunpowder, at least for some types of computations. Today no quantum computer exists, beyond laboratory prototypes capable of solving only tiny problems, and many
Displaying 101 - 109 of 109
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