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Featured researches published by Yu Xu.


Science | 2017

Satellite-based entanglement distribution over 1200 kilometers

Juan Yin; Yuan Cao; Yu-Huai Li; Sheng-Kai Liao; Liang Zhang; Ji-Gang Ren; Wen-Qi Cai; Weiyue Liu; Bo Li; Hui Dai; Guang-Bing Li; Qi-Ming Lu; Yun-Hong Gong; Yu Xu; Shuang-Lin Li; Feng-Zhi Li; Ya-Yun Yin; Ziqing Jiang; Ming Li; Jianjun Jia; Ge Ren; Dong He; Yi-Lin Zhou; Xiao-Xiang Zhang; Na Wang; Xiang Chang; Zhen-Cai Zhu; Nai-Le Liu; Yu-Ao Chen; Chao-Yang Lu

Entangled photons are distributed over vast distances using a satellite-to-ground link. Space calling Earth, on the quantum line A successful quantum communication network will rely on the ability to distribute entangled photons over large distances between receiver stations. So far, free-space demonstrations have been limited to line-of-sight links across cities or between mountaintops. Scattering and coherence decay have limited the link separations to around 100 km. Yin et al. used the Micius satellite, which was launched last year and is equipped with a specialized quantum optical payload. They successfully demonstrated the satellite-based entanglement distribution to receiver stations separated by more than 1200 km. The results illustrate the possibility of a future global quantum communication network. Science, this issue p. 1140 Long-distance entanglement distribution is essential for both foundational tests of quantum physics and scalable quantum networks. Owing to channel loss, however, the previously achieved distance was limited to ~100 kilometers. Here we demonstrate satellite-based distribution of entangled photon pairs to two locations separated by 1203 kilometers on Earth, through two satellite-to-ground downlinks with a summed length varying from 1600 to 2400 kilometers. We observed a survival of two-photon entanglement and a violation of Bell inequality by 2.37 ± 0.09 under strict Einstein locality conditions. The obtained effective link efficiency is orders of magnitude higher than that of the direct bidirectional transmission of the two photons through telecommunication fibers.


Physical Review A | 2016

Experimental round-robin differential phase-shift quantum key distribution

Yu-Huai Li; Yuan Cao; Hui Dai; Jin Lin; Zhen Zhang; Wei Chen; Yu Xu; Jian-Yu Guan; Sheng-Kai Liao; Juan Yin; Qiang Zhang; Xiongfeng Ma; Cheng-Zhi Peng; Jian-Wei Pan

In conventional quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols, security is guaranteed by estimating the amount of leaked information through monitoring signal disturbance, which, in practice, is generally caused by environmental noise and device imperfections rather than eavesdropping. Such estimation therefore tends to overrate the amount of leaked information in practice, leads to a fundamental threshold of the bit error rate. The threshold becomes a bottleneck of the development of practical QKD systems. In classical communication, according to Shannons communication theory, information can transform through a noisy channel even if the background noise is very strong compare to the signal and hence the threshold of the bit error rate tends to 50%. One might wonder whether a QKD scheme can also tolerate error rate as high as 50%. The question is answered affirmatively with the recent work of round-robin differential phase-shift (RRDPS) protocol, which breaks through the fundamental threshold of the bit error rate and indicates another potential direction in the field of quantum cryptography. The key challenge to realize the RRDPS scheme lies on the measurement device, which requires a variable-delay interferometer. The delay needs to be chosen from a set of predetermined values randomly. Such measurement can be realized by switching between many interferometers with different delays at a high speed in accordance with the system repetition rate. The more delay values can be chosen from, the higher error rate can be tolerated. By designing an optical system with multiple switches and employing an active phase stabilization technology, we successfully construct a variable-delay interferometer with 128 actively selectable delays. With this measurement, we experimentally demonstrate the RRDPS QKD protocol and obtain a final key rate of 15.54 bps via a total loss of 18 dB and 8.9% error rate.


AIP Advances | 2017

Megahertz high voltage pulse generator suitable for capacitive load

Yu Xu; Wei Chen; Hao Liang; Yu-Huai Li; Fu-Tian Liang; Qi Shen; Sheng-Kai Liao; Cheng-Zhi Peng

A high voltage pulse generator is presented to drive Pockels cell. The Pockels cell behaves like a capacitor which slows the rise/fall time of the pulse and restrains the repetition rate of the generator. To drive the Pockels cell applied in quantum communication system, it requires about 1 MHz repetition rate with the rise/fall time of the pulse less than 50 ns, adjustable amplitude up to 800 V and an adjustable duration. With the assistance of self-designed transformers, the circuits is simplified that a pair of high current radio frequency (RF) MOSFET drivers are employed to switch the power MOSFETs at a high speed, and the power MOSFETs shape the final output pulse with the requirements. From the tests, the generator can produce 800 V square pulses continously at 1 MHz rate with 46 ns in risetime and 31 ns in falltime when driving a 51 pF capacitive load. And the generator is now used to drive Pockels cell for encoding the polarization of photons.


arxiv:eess.SP | 2018

Scalable Self-Adaptive Synchronous Triggering System in Superconducting Quantum Computing

Li-Hua Sun; Fu-Tian Liang; Jin Lin; Cheng Guo; Yu Xu; Sheng-Kai Liao; Cheng-Zhi Peng


arxiv:eess.SP | 2018

High Performance and Scalable AWG for Superconducting Quantum Computing

Jin Lin; Fu-Tian Liang; Yu Xu; Li-Hua Sun; Cheng Guo; Sheng-Kai Liao; Cheng-Zhi Peng


arxiv:eess.SP | 2018

Control and Readout Software in Superconducting Quantum Computing.

Cheng Guo; Fu-Tian Liang; Jin Lin; Yu Xu; Li-Hua Sun; Sheng-Kai Liao; Cheng-Zhi Peng; Weiyue Liu


arxiv:eess.SP | 2018

Technique of active phase stabilization for the interferometer with 128 actively selectable paths

Yu Xu; Jin Lin; Yu-Huai Li; Hui Dai; Sheng-Kai Liao; Cheng-Zhi Peng


arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2018

Ultra-precision DC source for Superconducting Quantum Computer

Fu-Tian Liang; Peng Miao; Jin Lin; Yu Xu; Cheng Guo; Li-Hua Sun; Sheng-Kai Liao; Ge Jin; Cheng-Zhi Peng

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Sheng-Kai Liao

University of Science and Technology of China

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Cheng-Zhi Peng

University of Science and Technology of China

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Jin Lin

University of Science and Technology of China

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Fu-Tian Liang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Yu-Huai Li

University of Science and Technology of China

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Hui Dai

University of Science and Technology of China

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Juan Yin

University of Science and Technology of China

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Wei Chen

University of Science and Technology of China

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Yuan Cao

University of Science and Technology of China

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