Scientists at the University of Bristol have developed an optical fiber-based single photon source which can operate in ambient room temperatures. This technology is capable of producing single photons at speeds of up to 1 GHz, making it suitable for high-speed, secure. Semiconductor quantum dot (QD) quantum light sources have long been established as suitable candidates for many quantum information applications, due to the on-demand emission of highly pure and highly indistinguishable single and entangled photons. Single-photon emitters quantum mechanically connect quantum bits (or qubits) between nodes in quantum networks. Now, researchers have developed an ytterbium-doped optical fiber at room. We demonstrate the distribution of single-photon-level pulses from a mode-locked laser source over a phase-stable fiber link, achieving an optical timing jitter of less than 100 as over 10 minutes of data accumulation. This stability enables a fidelity greater than 0. 1. Using this platform, we transmit all four BB84 polarization states from an InAs quantum dot over 340 m with 0.
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