Quantum light sources have, until now, required external off-chip, bulky laser systems, which has limited their use in the field. Previously, said Raktim Haldar, a Humboldt fellow in Kues’ group, it was a major challenge to integrate a laser, filter, and cavity on the same chip due to the lack of a material that was efficient to use to build these different components.
The hybrid technology comprises an indium phosphide laser, a filter, and a cavity made of silicon nitride. On the chip, in a spontaneous nonlinear process, two photons are created from a laser field. Each photon spans a range of colors simultaneously, called “superposition,” and the colors of both photons are correlated; that is, the photons are entangled and can store quantum information.
According to Haldar, unlike Google, for example, which he said currently uses supercold qubits in cryogenic systems, a quantum advantage could be achieved via the recent work, with a photonic system on a chip even at room temperature.
The researchers expect that the work will help to lower the production costs of applications.
“We can imagine that our quantum light source will soon be a fundamental component of programmable photonic quantum processors,” Kues said.
The research was published in Nature Photonics (www.doi.org/10.1038/s41566-023-01193-1).