Quantum Information Technologies (QITE)

Counter-intuitive properties of quantum mechanics (e.g. nonlocality and entanglement) may be used to design information processing and telecommunication protocols that, in some special cases, display substantial advantage with respect to their classical counterparts. The experimental efforts to exploit this possibility have already led to the emergence of quantum technologies: quantum devices devoted to specific tasks are now developed worldwide. The QITE team is a stakeholder in this effort.
Light is the natural carrier for the transmission of quantum information, while matter is better suited for its storage and handling. Both platforms are currently developed in the experiments performed by QITE team: we design and develop semiconductor sources of quantum correlated photons and laser-cooled trapped-ion devices. The team’s efforts are focused on the integration of these two device families on chip. The goal is double: 1) exploit these devices to practically implement quantum information protocols; 2) invent, explore and study new strategies and better understand fundamental questions related to quantum information. Concerning the realization of the devices, our research is closely connected to clean-room technological developments.
In parallel to the experimental axes, the QITE team has a theoretical activity that is positioned in a multidisciplinary context combining the study of fundamental aspects of entanglement to the invention/interpretation of new experimental approaches.

 

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An hybrid III-V / Silicon source of photon pairs

An hybrid III-V / Silicon source of photon pairs

The QITE team of MPQ lab, in collaboration with C2N lab and STMicroelectronics, has just published its work on the development of integrated hybrid sources of entangled photons in PRX Quantum. Combining the generation and manipulation of quantum states of light on a...

Sara Ducci elected Optical Fellow

Sara Ducci elected Optical Fellow

Congratulations to Sara Ducci, Professor at Lab. MPQ (Université Paris Cité / CNRS), who has just been elected Fellow of Optica (formerly OSA), "for her significant achievements in the field of integrated nonlinear quantum photonics, from fundamentals to applications,...

Pint of Science

Pint of Science

Several of our researchers are participating in the Pint of Science festival, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. It is one of the largest science festivals in the world. Until May 24th, researchers and the general public come together over a drink in...

Web series on Quantum Entanglement

Web series on Quantum Entanglement

Hugo Cayla has collaborated with several researchers, including Sara Ducci and Pérola Milman from the MPQ laboratory, to shed light on the fascinating aspects of quantum entanglement through a 4-episode web series. The first episode, which can be found below, is...