4.5 Article

Dynamical learning of a photonics quantum-state engineering process

Journal

ADVANCED PHOTONICS
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.AP.3.6.066002

Keywords

orbital angular momentum; state engineering; black-box optimization; algorithm; quantum walk

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union [766900, 884676]
  2. QUSHIP PRIN [2017SRNBRK]
  3. DfE-SFI Investigator Program [15/IA/2864]
  4. COST Action [CA15220]
  5. Royal Society Wolfson Research Fellowship [RSWF\R3\183013]
  6. Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grant [RGP-2018-266]
  7. UK EPSRC [EP/T028106/1]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [884676] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Experimental engineering of high-dimensional quantum states is essential for quantum information protocols. An automated adaptive optimization protocol has been developed to estimate and adjust state quality in real time. The method demonstrates robustness and applicability in various scenarios, making it a powerful tool for optimizing noisy experimental tasks in quantum technologies.
Experimental engineering of high-dimensional quantum states is a crucial task for several quantum information protocols. However, a high degree of precision in the characterization of the noisy experimental apparatus is required to apply existing quantum-state engineering protocols. This is often lacking in practical scenarios, affecting the quality of the engineered states. We implement, experimentally, an automated adaptive optimization protocol to engineer photonic orbital angular momentum (OAM) states. The protocol, given a target output state, performs an online estimation of the quality of the currently produced states, relying on output measurement statistics, and determines how to tune the experimental parameters to optimize the state generation. To achieve this, the algorithm does not need to be imbued with a description of the generation apparatus itself. Rather, it operates in a fully black-box scenario, making the scheme applicable in a wide variety of circumstances. The handles controlled by the algorithm are the rotation angles of a series of waveplates and can be used to probabilistically generate arbitrary four-dimensional OAM states. We showcase our scheme on different target states both in classical and quantum regimes and prove its robustness to external perturbations on the control parameters. This approach represents a powerful tool for automated optimizations of noisy experimental tasks for quantum information protocols and technologies.

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