Simulating Universal Quantum Gate Sets on Photonic OAM Qubits: Single-Qubit and Multi-Qubit Operations via Spatial Light Modulator Phase Holography
Abstract
Spatial light modulators (SLMs) have emerged as reconfigurable platforms for photonic quantum information processing, offering software-defined control over the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of light encoded in Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) beams. This paper presents a comprehensive simulation and hardware-grounded fidelity analysis of quantum gate operations implemented on the HOLOEYE LC 2012 transmissive SLM. A realistic three-channel noise model comprising 8-bit quantisation noise, twisted-nematic ...
Description / Details
Spatial light modulators (SLMs) have emerged as reconfigurable platforms for photonic quantum information processing, offering software-defined control over the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of light encoded in Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) beams. This paper presents a comprehensive simulation and hardware-grounded fidelity analysis of quantum gate operations implemented on the HOLOEYE LC 2012 transmissive SLM. A realistic three-channel noise model comprising 8-bit quantisation noise, twisted-nematic (TN) electronic and thermal noise, and phase-wrap clipping error is obtained from the manufacturer's datasheet without free-parameter fitting, yielding a total noise of . The complete universal single-qubit gate set and two-qubit entangling gates are simulated on a computational grid. Results show that predicted gate fidelity are in the range of , with fork grating gates limited primarily by TN noise and phase gates achieving higher fidelity owing to zero phase-wrap clipping error. In addition, Bell state preparation via the H-CNOT circuit achieves after two SLM interactions. We benchmark our obtained results against six published experimental studies spanning the 78%--99.6% fidelity range. Finally, a wavelength-dependent analysis identifies 450--532 nm operation as the optimal regime for this device.
Source: arXiv:2606.26088v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.26088v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.26088v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.26088v1
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Jun 25, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
0