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Main Authors: Liu, Sitong, Stack, John, Sun, Ke, Van Beeumen, Roel, Monga, Inder, Klymko, Katherine, Brown, Kenneth R., Saglamyurek, Erhan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.06513
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author Liu, Sitong
Stack, John
Sun, Ke
Van Beeumen, Roel
Monga, Inder
Klymko, Katherine
Brown, Kenneth R.
Saglamyurek, Erhan
author_facet Liu, Sitong
Stack, John
Sun, Ke
Van Beeumen, Roel
Monga, Inder
Klymko, Katherine
Brown, Kenneth R.
Saglamyurek, Erhan
contents Distributed quantum computing can potentially address the scalability challenge by networking processors through photon-mediated remote entanglement. Prior approaches assumed that remote Bell pairs require distillation before use, incurring substantial overhead, to achieve sufficiently high fidelity. However, recent results show that lattice-surgery operations at logical qubit boundaries tolerate significantly higher error rates than previously assumed. We quantify the resource trade-offs between distillation overhead and surface-code distance requirements under realistic constraints including probabilistic entanglement generation and memory decoherence. We identify the fidelity crossover point separating the two regimes. Below this threshold, the distillation strategy dominates, reducing resource overhead by up to two orders of magnitude. Above it, no-distillation becomes the more efficient choice, reducing resource overhead by more than half. We briefly describe the application of these methods to ion-trap and neutral-atom platforms. These results provide joint design guidelines for optimizing photonic interconnects and fault-tolerant architectures in distributed quantum computing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_06513
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Remote Entanglement in Lattice Surgery: To Distill, or Not to Distill
Liu, Sitong
Stack, John
Sun, Ke
Van Beeumen, Roel
Monga, Inder
Klymko, Katherine
Brown, Kenneth R.
Saglamyurek, Erhan
Quantum Physics
Distributed quantum computing can potentially address the scalability challenge by networking processors through photon-mediated remote entanglement. Prior approaches assumed that remote Bell pairs require distillation before use, incurring substantial overhead, to achieve sufficiently high fidelity. However, recent results show that lattice-surgery operations at logical qubit boundaries tolerate significantly higher error rates than previously assumed. We quantify the resource trade-offs between distillation overhead and surface-code distance requirements under realistic constraints including probabilistic entanglement generation and memory decoherence. We identify the fidelity crossover point separating the two regimes. Below this threshold, the distillation strategy dominates, reducing resource overhead by up to two orders of magnitude. Above it, no-distillation becomes the more efficient choice, reducing resource overhead by more than half. We briefly describe the application of these methods to ion-trap and neutral-atom platforms. These results provide joint design guidelines for optimizing photonic interconnects and fault-tolerant architectures in distributed quantum computing.
title Remote Entanglement in Lattice Surgery: To Distill, or Not to Distill
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.06513