Update publications

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Wojciech Kozlowski 2022-11-29 21:17:55 +01:00
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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ title = "A P4 Data Plane for the Quantum Internet"
date = 2020-12-01
authors = ["Wojciech Kozlowski", "Fernando Kuipers", "Stephanie Wehner"]
publication_types = ["1"]
abstract = "The quantum technology revolution brings with it the promise of a quantum internet. A new --- quantum --- network stack will be needed to account for the fundamentally new properties of quantum entanglement. The first realisations of quantum networks are imminent and research interest in quantum network protocols has started growing. In the non-quantum world, programmable data planes have broken the pattern of ossification of the protocol stack and enabled a new --- software-defined --- network software architecture. Similarly, a programmable quantum data plane could pave the way for a software-defined quantum network architecture. In this paper, we demonstrate how we use P4$_{16}$ to explore abstractions and device architectures for quantum networks."
abstract = "The quantum technology revolution brings with it the promise of a quantum internet. A new --- quantum --- network stack will be needed to account for the fundamentally new properties of quantum entanglement. The first realisations of quantum networks are imminent and research interest in quantum network protocols has started growing. In the non-quantum world, programmable data planes have broken the pattern of ossification of the protocol stack and enabled a new --- software-defined --- network software architecture. Similarly, a programmable quantum data plane could pave the way for a software-defined quantum network architecture. In this paper, we demonstrate how we use P416 to explore abstractions and device architectures for quantum networks."
featured = false
publication = "*In Proceedings of the 3rd P4 Workshop in Europe (EuroP4'20), 4951*"
url_pdf = "https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3426744.3431321"

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title = "Experimental demonstration of entanglement delivery using a quantum network stack"
date = 2022-10-15
authors = ["Matteo Pompili", "Carlo Delle Donne", "Ingmar te Raa", "Bart van der Vecht", "Matthew Skrzypczyk", "Guilherme Ferreira", "Lisa de Kluijver", "Arian J. Stolk", "Sophie L. N. Hermans", "Przemysław Pawełczak", "Wojciech Kozlowski", "Ronald Hanson", "Stephanie Wehner"]
authors = ["M. Pompili", "C. Delle Donne", "I. te Raa", "B. van der Vecht", "M. Skrzypczyk", "G. Ferreira", "L. de Kluijver", "A. J. Stolk", "S. L. N. Hermans", "P. Pawełczak", "W. Kozlowski", "R. Hanson", "S. Wehner"]
publication_types = ["2"]
abstract = "Scaling current quantum communication demonstrations to a large-scale quantum network will require not only advancements in quantum hardware capabilities, but also robust control of such devices to bridge the gap to user demand. Moreover, the abstraction of tasks and services offered by the quantum network should enable platform-independent applications to be executed without knowledge of the underlying physical implementation. Here we experimentally demonstrate, using remote solid-state quantum network nodes, a link layer and a physical layer protocol for entanglement-based quantum networks. The link layer abstracts the physical-layer entanglement attempts into a robust, platform-independent entanglement delivery service. The system is used to run full state tomography of the delivered entangled states, as well as preparation of a remote qubit state on a server by its client. Our results mark a clear transition from physics experiments to quantum communication systems, which will enable the development and testing of components of future quantum networks."
abstract = "Scaling current quantum communication demonstrations to a large-scale quantum network will require not only advancements in quantum hardware capabilities, but also robust control of such devices to bridge the gap in user demand. Moreover, the abstraction of tasks and services offered by the quantum network should enable platform-independent applications to be executed without the knowledge of the underlying physical implementation. Here we experimentally demonstrate, using remote solid-state quantum network nodes, a link layer, and a physical layer protocol for entanglement-based quantum networks. The link layer abstracts the physical-layer entanglement attempts into a robust, platform-independent entanglement delivery service. The system is used to run full state tomography of the delivered entangled states, as well as preparation of a remote qubit state on a server by its client. Our results mark a clear transition from physics experiments to quantum communication systems, which will enable the development and testing of components of future quantum networks."
featured = true
publication = "*npj Quantum Information 8, Article number: 121*"
url_pdf = "https://www.nature.com/articles/s41534-022-00631-2"

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title = "Towards European standards for quantum technologies"
date = 2022-11-29
authors = ["Oskar van Deventer", "Nicolas Spethmann", "Marius Loeffler", "Michele Amoretti", "Rob van den Brink", "Natalia Bruno", "Paolo Comi", "Noel Farrugia", "Marco Gramegna", "Andreas Jenet", "Ben Kassenberg", "Wojciech Kozlowski", "Thomas Länger", "Tobias Lindstrom", "Vicente Martin", "Niels Neumann", "Homer Papadopoulos", "Saverio Pascazio", "Momtchil Peev", "Richard Pitwon", "M. Adriaan Rol", "Paolo Traina", "Pim Venderbosch", "Frank K. Wilhelm-Mauch"]
publication_types = ["2"]
abstract = """The Second Quantum Revolution facilitates the engineering of new classes of sensors, communication technologies, and computers with unprecedented capabilities. Supply chains for quantum technologies are emerging, some focused on commercially available components for enabling technologies and/or quantum-technologies research infrastructures, others with already higher technology-readiness levels, near to the market.
In 2018, the European Commission has launched its large-scale and long-term Quantum Flagship research initiative to support and foster the creation and development of a competitive European quantum technologies industry, as well as the consolidation and expansion of leadership and excellence in European quantum technology research. One of the measures to achieve an accelerated development and uptake has been identified by the Quantum Flagship in its Strategic Research Agenda: The promotion of coordinated, dedicated standardisation and certification efforts.
Standardisation is indeed of paramount importance to facilitate the growth of new technologies, and the development of efficient and effective supply chains. The harmonisation of technologies, methodologies, and interfaces enables interoperable products, innovation, and competition, all leading to structuring and hence growth of markets. As quantum technologies mature, the time has come to start thinking about further standardisation needs.
This article presents insights on standardisation for quantum technologies from the perspective of the CEN-CENELEC Focus Group on Quantum Technologies (FGQT), which was established in June 2020 to coordinate and support the development of standards relevant for European industry and research."""
featured = false
publication = "*EPJ Quantum Technology volume 9, Article number: 33*"
url_pdf = "https://epjquantumtechnology.springeropen.com/articles/10.1140/epjqt/s40507-022-00150-1"
url_preprint = "https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.01622"
doi = "10.1140/epjqt/s40507-022-00150-1"
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title = "Towards European Standards for Quantum Technologies"
date = 2022-03-03
authors = ["O. van Deventer", "N. Spethmann", "M. Loeffler", "M. Amoretti", "R. van den Brink", "N. Bruno", "P. Comi", "N. Farrugia", "M. Gramegna", "B. Kassenberg", "W. Kozlowski", "T. Länger", "T. Lindstrom", "V. Martin", "N. Neumann", "H. Papadopoulos", "S. Pascazio", "M. Peev", "R. Pitwon", "M.A. Rol", "P. Traina", "P. Venderbosch", "F. K. Wilhelm-Mauch", "A. Jenet"]
publication_types = ["3"]
abstract = "The Second Quantum Revolution facilitates the engineering of new classes of sensors, communication technologies, and computers with unprecedented capabilities. Supply chains for quantum technologies are emerging, some focussed on commercially available components for enabling technologies and/or quantum-technologies research infrastructures, others with already higher technology-readiness levels, near to the market. In 2018, the European Commission has launched its large-scale and long-term Quantum Flagship research initiative to support and foster the creation and development of a competitive European quantum technologies industry, as well as the consolidation and expansion of leadership and excellence in European quantum technology research. One of the measures to achieve an accelerated development and uptake has been identified by the Quantum Flagship in its Strategic Research Agenda: the promotion of coordinated, dedicated standardisation and certification efforts. Standardisation is indeed of paramount importance to facilitate the growth of new technologies, and the development of efficient and effective supply chains. The harmonisation of technologies, methodologies, and interfaces enables interoperable products, innovation, and competition, all leading to structuring and hence growth of markets. As quantum technologies are maturing, time has come to start thinking about further standardisation needs. This article presents insights on standardisation for quantum technologies from the perspective of the CEN-CENELEC Focus Group on Quantum Technologies (FGQT), which was established in June 2020 to coordinate and support the development of standards relevant for European industry and research. "
featured = false
url_preprint = "https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.01622"
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