In the pursuit of a quantum computer, the photon is a leading candidate for the quantum bit, or qubit. Working models of photonic circuits, however, have been unscalable arrangements of bulky mirrors and beamsplitters sitting atop a square-meter-sized table. Now scientists at the Center for Quantum Photonics at the University of Bristol in the UK have printed several dozen photonic circuits onto a silicon wafer. The research team created waveguides by first depositing a doped layer of silica onto the wafer, then patterning 3.5-micron-wide ridges into the silica. Two waveguides are coupled when they approach each other and then diverge, as shown in the figure, allowing evanescent waves to overlap. Using such directional couplers, the researchers not only fabricated on-chip beamsplitters, interferometers, and even a controlled-NOT gate, but combined those devices into photonic circuits. Among their demonstrated results is a high-fidelity, path entangled state of two photons, an important element...
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
1 June 2008
June 01 2008
Citation
Jermey N. A. Matthews; Guiding light. Physics Today 1 June 2008; 61 (6): 20–21. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4796873
Download citation file:
PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION
Purchase an annual subscription for $25. A subscription grants you access to all of Physics Today's current and backfile content.
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
20
Views
Citing articles via
The no-cloning theorem
William K. Wootters; Wojciech H. Zurek
Dense crowds follow their own rules
Johanna L. Miller
Focus on software, data acquisition, and instrumentation
Andreas Mandelis