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Tomorrow's quantum technologies for communication, sensing, and distributed computing will rely on networks with entanglement shared between spatially separated nodes. The authors provide improved protocols and policies for entanglement distribution along a chain of nodes, accounting for practical limitations such as photon losses, nonideal measurements, and quantum memories with short coherence times. These policies feature dynamic, state-dependent memory cutoffs and collaboration between nodes, all of which are quantified. Nesting policies for small repeater chains yields policies for large chains that improve upon a swap-as-soon-as-possible approach, and thus pave the way to scaling up.
Haldar et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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