Quantum technologies, devices and systems that operate leveraging quantum mechanical effects, could tackle some tasks more reliably and efficiently than any classical technology could. In recent years, some researchers have been trying to realize quantum networks to scale up the size of quantum computers, which essentially consist of several connected smaller quantum processors.
The devices in a quantum network are connected via entanglement, a quantum effect via which distant quantum particles become inextricably linked and share a single correlated state. One way to create entanglement between different atomic quantum computers is to use an atom-cavity interface, a system in which atoms interact with light inside an optical cavity.
Over two decades ago, two physicists at the University of Aarhus introduced a protocol designed to produce high-quality entangled states, reliably connecting devices in a network. Despite its potential, this framework, known as the state-carving (SC) protocol, was found to only succeed in 50% of cases, which has so far prevented its application on a large scale.








