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Analog photonic simulator for large-scale transport

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Announce Type: cross Abstract: Transport equations describe how physical quantities -- such as mass, energy, momentum, concentration, probability, or fields -- are carried, propagated, or redistributed through space and time, forming a foundational class of partial differential equations across science and engineering. However, high-dimensional partial differential equations are difficult to represent on digital grids because the number of degrees of freedom grows exponentially with...

arXiv:2606.00581v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: Transport equations describe how physical quantities -- such as mass, energy, momentum, concentration, probability, or fields -- are carried, propagated, or redistributed through space and time, forming a foundational class of partial differential equations across science and engineering. However, high-dimensional partial differential equations are difficult to represent on digital grids because the number of degrees of freedom grows exponentially with dimension. Continuous-variable quantum photonics on the other hand can represent and evolve these large-scale fields without first discretizing space into a discrete grid. We demonstrate a large-scale analog photonic simulator for the constant-coefficient advection equation, a transport equation that is a fundamental benchmark for scientific computing. The solution of a $d$-variable advection equation is encoded into $d$ optical modes, so that the partial differential equation evolution maps directly to programmable phase-space displacements generated by optical quadrature momenta. Using a time-domain continuous-variable quantum photonic platform, we validate programmable control with $20,000$ single-mode squeezed states and $20,000$ two-mode squeezed states, and implement transport dynamics on a $20,000$-mode cluster-state resource. Homodyne measurements then verifies mode-resolved displacement control, which can provide first and second-order moment information of the solution to the advection equation, with final achievable relative error as low as $0.8\%$ and $0.92\%$ for first and second-order moment observables respectively. Our results establish continuous-variable photonics as a suitable programmable analog platform for large-scale advection equations.
Analog (ORG) Homodyne (LOCATION)
Originally published by arXiv Physics Read original →