Restoring quantum communication efficiency over high loss optical fibres
Abstract
In the absence of quantum repeaters, quantum communication proved to be nearly impossible across optical fibres longer than 20 km due to the drop of transmissivity below the critical threshold of 1/2. However, if the signals fed into the fibre are separated by a sufficiently short time interval, memory effects must be taken into account. In this paper we show that by properly accounting for these effects it is possible to devise schemes that enable unassisted quantum communication across arbitrarily long optical fibres at a fixed positive qubit transmission rate. We also demonstrate how to achieve entanglement-assisted communication over arbitrarily long distances at a rate of the same order of the maximum achievable in the unassisted noiseless case.
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