(Press-News.org) Physicists have long recognized the value of photonic graph states in quantum information processing. However, the difficulty of making these graph states has left this value largely untapped. In a step forward for the field, researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have proposed a new scheme they term “emit-then-add” for producing highly entangled states of many photons that can work with current hardware. Published in npj Quantum Information, their strategy lays the groundwork for a wide range of quantum enhanced operations including measurement-based quantum computing.
Entanglement is a key driver in delivering faster and more secure computational and information systems. But creating large, entangled states of more than two photons is challenging because the losses inherent in optical systems mean most photon sources have a low probability of successfully producing a photon that survives to the point of detection. Therefore, any attempt to build a large entangled state is full of missing photons, breaking the state apart. And identifying the missing spots would mean attempting detection of the photons, which is a destructive process itself, and precludes going back to fill those spots.
To circumvent this challenge, a team led by Associate Professor of Physics Elizabeth Goldschmidt and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Eric Chitambar began with a different mindset.
“We’ve known for years that these photonic graph states are incredibly valuable,” Goldschmidt said. “But for this project, we changed our thinking from, ‘What would be the most useful end result?’ to, ‘What can we do with the resources we already have?’ It took us a long time to realize that destructively measuring the photons would be okay for this wide set of useful circumstances.”
This reframing led the researchers to posit a heralded scheme for making photonic graph states—one compatible with state-of-the-art coherent quantum emitters. The key? A paradigm they term “virtual graph states.” By adding a photon to a virtual graph only after its confirmed detection, the process’s primary limitation shifts from photon loss—which is generally large—to the coherence of the spin qubits used to emit the photons, which can be very long.
The Illinois Grainger engineers highlight that their protocol is fully general if non-destructive measurement of the photons can be implemented—however, this is out of reach with current hardware. Thus, they introduce a broad class of protocols that can be implemented successfully using destructively measured photons and virtual graph states. They propose an example-use case that could be implemented on currently available standard experimental apparatuses to perform secure two-party computation based on repeatedly generating small graph states.
“There’s something almost counterintuitive about it,” said Max Gold, a graduate student and co-lead author of the paper. “We’re building up these correlations that can only be described by quantum systems across different photons. We have these photons that don’t ever exist at the same time in nature, and something mediating their interactions that’s not the photons themselves. Even though we talk about it as a single state, not all the qubits in the state exist at one time.”
If implemented, the researchers’ methodology could be used in measurement-based quantum computing, secure two-party computation and even quantum sensing.
“This could be done on a number of experimental apparatuses around the world,” said Jianlong Lin, a graduate student and co-lead author of the paper. “Our method is feasible in practice even for emitter-based platforms with traditionally low photon collection efficiencies such as trapped ions and neutral atoms. It would be one of very few demonstrations of photonic graph states with practical uses.”
Going forward, Goldschmidt’s lab is working to realize their protocol. Lin will continue focusing on the experimental side, initiating the early stages of the process. Meanwhile, Gold will explore the theoretical side by identifying other potential applications for graph states using their methodology.
“We’ve created a protocol based on (realistic) hardware that has at least one use, which is this multi-party computation,” Goldschmidt said. “A lot of the literature has ignored hardware limitations, and I hope this work encourages other people to think about what could be produced given the real constraints of real near-term hardware.”
Elizabeth Goldschmidt is an Illinois Grainger Engineering associate professor in the Department of Physics. She is affiliated with the Materials Research Laboratory, the NSF QLCI: Hybrid Quantum Architectures and Networks, and is the Associate Director of the Illinois Quantum and Information Science and Technology Center.
Eric Chitambar is an Illinois Grainger Engineering professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He is affiliated with the Illinois Quantum and Information Science and Technology Center, the NSF QLCI: Hybrid Quantum Architectures and Networks and the Coordinated Science Laboratory.
END
Physicists develop new protocol for building photonic graph states
2026-02-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
OHSU-led research initiative examines supervised psilocybin
2026-02-12
A federally funded research initiative will enable researchers at Oregon Health & Science University and other organizations to assess the safety and effectiveness of state-regulated access to psilocybin, also known as magic mushrooms.
The five-year, $3.3 million award is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health — a first.
“This is the first federally funded work to study the impact of legal psychedelic services delivered in community settings,” said co-principal investigator Adie ...
New review identifies pathways for managing PFAS waste in semiconductor manufacturing
2026-02-12
As semiconductor manufacturing rapidly expands to meet growing global demand for generative AI and advanced electronics, a new review published in Environmental Science & Technology assesses the current state of science, technology and policy around managing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) waste in the industry and outlines recommendations for a path forward.
PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” play a central role in modern chipmaking due to their unique properties and essential function in complex chemical processes like photolithography and etching, yet their links to environmental and health ...
New research finds state-level abortion restrictions associated with increased maternal deaths
2026-02-12
Embargoed until 1:45 PM PST, February 12, 2026
New Research Finds State-Level Abortion Restrictions Associated with Increased Maternal Deaths
Las Vegas, NV – The increased number of state-level abortion restrictions in the U.S. was associated with a parallel increase in maternal deaths between 2005 and 2023, according to new research presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) 2026 Pregnancy Meeting™. Researchers found that states with five or more different abortion restrictions had higher rates of maternal deaths from any cause, cardiovascular disease, and violence than those states with fewer restrictions.
“Abortion ...
New study assesses potential dust control options for Great Salt Lake
2026-02-12
A new collaborative study, led by University of Utah Professor of atmospheric sciences Kevin Perry, provides policymakers, agency leaders, and the public with the most comprehensive assessment to date of potential dust control options for the Great Salt Lake, as declining water levels continue to expose vast areas of lakebed to wind erosion.
The study, supported by the Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy in collaboration with the Great Salt Lake Commissioner’s Office, Utah Division of Water Resources and Department of Environmental Quality, considers a wide-range of options to engineer dust ...
Science policy education should start on campus
2026-02-12
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Although modern science has only been around for a few centuries, we’ve become quite adept at training students in the scientific method. But learning how to translate research insights into practical actions often isn’t part of a budding scientist’s curriculum.
UC Santa Barbara Assistant Professor Alexandra Phillips has put together a guide to help professors and administrators support their students' interests in ocean policy and build broader ...
Look again! Those wrinkly rocks may actually be a fossilized microbial community
2026-02-12
In 2016 while hiking on a hillside in Morocco, geologist Rowan Martindale saw something that made her stop in her tracks: a slab of sedimentary rock covered in a wrinkly texture reminiscent of elephant skin.
“I looked at the wrinkles and I was like, ‘These aren’t supposed to be in rocks like this. What the heck is going on?’” said Martindale, an associate professor at The University of Texas at Austin’s Jackson School of Geosciences.
Rock textures hold clues about the geological activity that shaped them. To Martindale, these wrinkles in time were a textbook example of microbial mat fossils. They captured a teeming ...
Exposure to intense wildfire smoke during pregnancy may be linked to increased likelihood of autism
2026-02-12
New research suggests that exposure to intense wildfire smoke during pregnancy may be associated with increased likelihood of autism in children. The study, by researchers at UC Davis Health and UCLA, was published in the journal Environment International.
The study of more than 8.6 million births in California is the largest to date examining how wildfire-specific air pollution may impact early neurodevelopment. Scientists combined detailed wildfire smoke data with state birth records from 2001 to 2019. They matched these with autism diagnoses from California ...
Children with Crohn’s have distinct gut bacteria from kids with other digestive disorders
2026-02-12
NYU researchers have found a “microbial signature” of pediatric Crohn's disease that differs from the makeup of gut bacteria in children with other gastrointestinal conditions, with Crohn’s patients harboring more pro-inflammatory bacteria and less protective bacteria.
The study of recently diagnosed children, published in the journal Physiological Reports, also reveals different bacteria in those with more severe Crohn’s disease symptoms and activity.
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the gastrointestinal tract, and rates of pediatric diagnoses have markedly grown over the ...
Genomics offers a faster path to restoring the American chestnut
2026-02-12
For more than a century, the American chestnut, once a dominant tree across eastern North American forests, has been devastated by an invasive fungal disease that killed billions of trees in the early 1900s. A new study published in Science shows that modern genomic tools can dramatically accelerate restoration while preserving the species’ ecological identity.
The research demonstrates that genomic selection, a method widely used in agriculture and animal breeding, can predict disease resistance in chestnut trees using DNA data alone. By allowing breeders to identify promising seedlings before years of field testing, the approach shortens breeding ...
Caught in the act: Astronomers watch a vanishing star turn into a black hole
2026-02-12
Astronomers have watched a dying star fail to explode as a supernova, instead collapsing into a black hole. The remarkable sighting is the most complete observational record ever made of a star’s transformation into a black hole, allowing astronomers to construct a comprehensive physical picture of the process.
Combining recent observations of the star with over a decade of archival data, the astronomers confirmed and refined theoretical models of how such massive stars turn into black holes. The team found that the star failed to explode as a supernova at the end of its life; instead, the star’s core ...