New joint project to investigate #QuantumRepeaters designed to provide for secure #QuantumCommunication networks of the future / German Federal Ministry of Education and Research #BMBF will fund the new partnership project with EUR 20 million for 3 years
https://nachrichten.idw-online.de/2025/02/11/new-joint-project-to-investigate-quantum-repeaters-designed-to-provide-for-secure-quantum-communication-networks
New joint project to investigate quantum repeaters designed to provide for secure quantum communication networks

New joint project to investigate #QuantumRepeaters designed to provide for secure #QuantumCommunication networks of the future / German Federal Ministry of Education and Research #BMBF will fund the new partnership project with EUR 20 million for three years / Subproject at #MainzUniversity involves both theoretical modeling and experimental realization ๐Ÿ‘‰ https://press.uni-mainz.de/new-joint-project-to-investigate-quantum-repeaters-designed-to-provide-for-secure-quantum-communication-networks-of-the-future/

@bmbf_bund

#QRN #QuantumNetworks #QuantumComputers #ITsecurity

New joint project to investigate quantum repeaters designed to provide for secure quantum communication networks of the future | Press and Public Relations

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz

After years of work, we are now releasing a paper (and a software package) able to simulate #quantumrepeaters in a versatile fashion, down to respecting nitty gritty parameter details for physical implementations, but at the same time allowing for complex #quantumnetworks.

https://scirate.com/arxiv/2212.03896

ReQuSim: Faithfully simulating near-term quantum repeaters

Quantum repeaters have long been established to be essential for distributing entanglement over long distances. Consequently, their experimental realization constitutes a core challenge of quantum communication. However, there are numerous open questions about implementation details for realistic, near-term experimental setups. In order to assess the performance of realistic repeater protocols, we here present a comprehensive Monte-Carlo based simulation platform for quantum repeaters that faithfully includes loss and models a wide range of imperfections such as memories with time-dependent noise. Our platform allows us to perform an analysis for quantum repeater setups and strategies that go far beyond known analytic results: This refers to being able to both capture more realistic noise models and analyse more complex repeater strategies. We present a number of findings centered around the combination of strategies for improving performance, such as entanglement purification and the use of multiple repeater stations, and demonstrate that there exist complex relationships between them. We stress how this platform is filling a missing link in the presently available tools to model complex quantum communication protocols aimed at contributing to the quantum internet.

SciRate