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Dive into the research topics where Philip Walther is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Walther.


Nature | 2005

Experimental one-way quantum computing

Philip Walther; Kevin Resch; Terry Rudolph; Emanuel Schenck; Harald Weinfurter; Vlatko Vedral; Markus Aspelmeyer; Anton Zeilinger

Standard quantum computation is based on sequences of unitary quantum logic gates that process qubits. The one-way quantum computer proposed by Raussendorf and Briegel is entirely different. It has changed our understanding of the requirements for quantum computation and more generally how we think about quantum physics. This new model requires qubits to be initialized in a highly entangled cluster state. From this point, the quantum computation proceeds by a sequence of single-qubit measurements with classical feedforward of their outcomes. Because of the essential role of measurement, a one-way quantum computer is irreversible. In the one-way quantum computer, the order and choices of measurements determine the algorithm computed. We have experimentally realized four-qubit cluster states encoded into the polarization state of four photons. We characterize the quantum state fully by implementing experimental four-qubit quantum state tomography. Using this cluster state, we demonstrate the feasibility of one-way quantum computing through a universal set of one- and two-qubit operations. Finally, our implementation of Grovers search algorithm demonstrates that one-way quantum computation is ideally suited for such tasks.Standard quantum computation is based on sequences of unitary quantum logic gates which process qubits. The one-way quantum computer proposed by Raussendorf and Briegel is entirely different. It has changed our understanding of the requirements for quantum computation and more generally how we think about quantum physics. This new model requires qubits to be initialized in a highly-entangled cluster state. From this point, the quantum computation proceeds by a sequence of single-qubit measurements with classical feedforward of their outcomes. Because of the essential role of measurement a one-way quantum computer is irreversible. In the one-way quantum computer the order and choices of measurements determine the algorithm computed. We have experimentally realized four-qubit cluster states encoded into the polarization state of four photons. We fully characterize the quantum state by implementing the first experimental four-qubit quantum state tomography. Using this cluster state we demonstrate the feasibility of one-way quantum computing through a universal set of one- and two-qubit operations. Finally, our implementation of Grovers search algorithm demonstrates that one-way quantum computation is ideally suited for such tasks.


Nature Photonics | 2013

Experimental boson sampling

Max Tillmann; Borivoje Dakic; René Heilmann; Stefan Nolte; Alexander Szameit; Philip Walther

The boson-sampling problem is experimentally solved by implementing Aaronson and Arkhipovs model of computation with photons in integrated optical circuits. These results set a benchmark for a type of quantum computer that can potentially outperform a conventional computer by using only a few photons and linear optical elements.


Nature | 2004

De Broglie wavelength of a non-local four-photon state.

Philip Walther; Jian-Wei Pan; Markus Aspelmeyer; Rupert Ursin; Sara Gasparoni; Anton Zeilinger

Superposition is one of the most distinctive features of quantum theory and has been demonstrated in numerous single-particle interference experiments. Quantum entanglement, the coherent superposition of states in multi-particle systems, yields more complex phenomena. One important type of multi-particle experiment uses path-entangled number states, which exhibit pure higher-order interference and the potential for applications in metrology and imaging; these include quantum interferometry and spectroscopy with phase sensitivity at the Heisenberg limit, or quantum lithography beyond the classical diffraction limit. It has been generally understood that in optical implementations of such schemes, lower-order interference effects always decrease the overall performance at higher particle numbers. Such experiments have therefore been limited to two photons. Here we overcome this limitation, demonstrating a four-photon interferometer based on linear optics. We observe interference fringes with a periodicity of one-quarter of the single-photon wavelength, confirming the presence of a four-particle mode-entangled state. We anticipate that this scheme should be extendable to arbitrary photon numbers, holding promise for realizable applications with entanglement-enhanced performance.


Nature Physics | 2012

Quantum discord as resource for remote state preparation

Borivoje Dakic; Yannick Ole Lipp; Xiao-song Ma; Martin Ringbauer; Sebastian Kropatschek; Stefanie Barz; Tomasz Paterek; Vlatko Vedral; Anton Zeilinger; Caslav Brukner; Philip Walther

Quantum discord is the total non-classical correlation between two systems. This includes, but is not limited to, entanglement. Photonic experiments now demonstrate that separable states with non-zero quantum discord are a useful resource for quantum information processing and can even outperform entangled states.


Nature | 2007

High-speed linear optics quantum computing using active feed-forward.

Robert Prevedel; Philip Walther; Felix Tiefenbacher; Pascal Böhi; Rainer Kaltenbaek; Thomas Jennewein; Anton Zeilinger

As information carriers in quantum computing, photonic qubits have the advantage of undergoing negligible decoherence. However, the absence of any significant photon–photon interaction is problematic for the realization of non-trivial two-qubit gates. One solution is to introduce an effective nonlinearity by measurements resulting in probabilistic gate operations. In one-way quantum computation, the random quantum measurement error can be overcome by applying a feed-forward technique, such that the future measurement basis depends on earlier measurement results. This technique is crucial for achieving deterministic quantum computation once a cluster state (the highly entangled multiparticle state on which one-way quantum computation is based) is prepared. Here we realize a concatenated scheme of measurement and active feed-forward in a one-way quantum computing experiment. We demonstrate that, for a perfect cluster state and no photon loss, our quantum computation scheme would operate with good fidelity and that our feed-forward components function with very high speed and low error for detected photons. With present technology, the individual computational step (in our case the individual feed-forward cycle) can be operated in less than 150 ns using electro-optical modulators. This is an important result for the future development of one-way quantum computers, whose large-scale implementation will depend on advances in the production and detection of the required highly entangled cluster states.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Realization of a photonic controlled-NOT gate sufficient for quantum computation

Sara Gasparoni; Jian-Wei Pan; Philip Walther; Terry Rudolph; Anton Zeilinger

We report the first experimental demonstration of a quantum controlled-NOT gate for different photons, which is classically feed forwardable. In the experiment, we achieved this goal with only the use of linear optics, an entangled ancillary pair of photons, and postselection. The techniques developed in our experiment are of significant importance for quantum information processing with linear optics.


Nature | 2004

Communications: quantum teleportation across the Danube.

Rupert Ursin; Thomas Jennewein; Markus Aspelmeyer; Rainer Kaltenbaek; M. Lindenthal; Philip Walther; Anton Zeilinger

Efficient long-distance quantum teleportation is crucial for quantum communication and quantum networking schemes. Here we describe the high-fidelity teleportation of photons over a distance of 600 metres across the River Danube in Vienna, with the optimal efficiency that can be achieved using linear optics. Our result is a step towards the implementation of a quantum repeater, which will enable pure entanglement to be shared between distant parties in a public environment and eventually on a worldwide scale.


Science | 2012

Demonstration of Blind Quantum Computing

Stefanie Barz; Elham Kashefi; Anne Broadbent; Joseph F. Fitzsimons; Anton Zeilinger; Philip Walther

Quantum Blindness While quantum computers offer speed advantages over their classical counterparts, the technological challenges facing their eventual realization suggest that they will need to be located in specialized facilities. Thus, interaction would then need to be on a quantum client:quantum server basis. Barz et al. (p. 303; see the Perspective by Vedral) implemented a proof-of-principle protocol that illustrates complete security in such a setup—for both the client and the server. In this blind quantum computing protocol, the client maintains the security of their data and the specifics of the calculation they want to perform, and the server cannot access the data or calculation of the client. A protocol is implemented that can ensure secure client-server interactions on a quantum computer architecture. Quantum computers, besides offering substantial computational speedups, are also expected to preserve the privacy of a computation. We present an experimental demonstration of blind quantum computing in which the input, computation, and output all remain unknown to the computer. We exploit the conceptual framework of measurement-based quantum computation that enables a client to delegate a computation to a quantum server. Various blind delegated computations, including one- and two-qubit gates and the Deutsch and Grover quantum algorithms, are demonstrated. The client only needs to be able to prepare and transmit individual photonic qubits. Our demonstration is crucial for unconditionally secure quantum cloud computing and might become a key ingredient for real-life applications, especially when considering the challenges of making powerful quantum computers widely available.


european quantum electronics conference | 2005

Distributing entanglement and single photons through an intra-city, free-space quantum channel

Kevin Resch; M. Lindenthal; B. Blauensteiner; H. R. Böhm; Alessandro Fedrizzi; M. Taraba; Rupert Ursin; Philip Walther; Andreas Poppe; Tobias Schmitt-Manderbach; Henning Weier; Harald Weinfurter; Anton Zeilinger

Entangled photons are distributed directly through the atmosphere to a receiver station 7.8 km away at night over the city center of Vienna, Austria. Without a time-stable connection, the two stations found coincidence counts in the detection events through the cross-correlation of locally-recorded time stamps shared over a public Internet channel. As such, the sending and receiver stations were completely independent. The polarization correlations contained in the measured time tags are sufficient to convincingly violate a CHSH-Bell inequality and demonstrate entanglement between the two city buildings.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Experimental realization of Dicke states of up to six-qubits for multiparty quantum networking

Robert Prevedel; G. Cronenberg; Mark Tame; Mauro Paternostro; Philip Walther; M. S. Kim; Anton Zeilinger

We report the first experimental generation and characterization of a six-photon Dicke state. The produced state shows a fidelity of F=0.56+/-0.02 with respect to an ideal Dicke state and violates a witness detecting genuine six-qubit entanglement by 4 standard deviations. We confirm characteristic Dicke properties of our resource and demonstrate its versatility by projecting out four- and five-photon Dicke states, as well as four-photon Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger and W states. We also show that Dicke states have interesting applications in multiparty quantum networking protocols such as open-destination teleportation, telecloning, and quantum secret sharing.

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Anton Zeilinger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Xiao-song Ma

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Fabian Laudenbach

Austrian Institute of Technology

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