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Integrated quantum memory for quantum communication. E. Saglamyurek, N. Sinclair, C. La Mela, and W.Tittel Institute for Quantum Information Science University of Calgary, Canada. M. George, R. Ricken, and W. Sohler Institut für Angewandte Physik University of Paderborn, Germany.
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Integrated quantum memory for quantum communication • E. Saglamyurek, N. Sinclair, C. La Mela, and W.Tittel • Institute for Quantum Information Science • University of Calgary, Canada M. George, R. Ricken, and W. Sohler Institut für Angewandte Physik University of Paderborn, Germany
Quantum memory, dream and reality • Two-pulse photon-echo-based storage of light • - Photon-echo quantum memory (CRIB & AFC) in RE crystals • AFC-based storage of light pulses in Tm:LiNbO3 waveguides • storage of 500 ps pulses • storage of 100 modes • Conclusion Integrated quantum memory for quantum communication WT, M. Afzelius, T. Chanelière, R. Cone, S. Kröll, S.A. Moiseev, and M. Sellars, Las. Phot. Rev. 2010
Quantum memory QM • A single-photon gun • A synchronization device for quantum data • - A key ingredient for a quantum repeater |y> 2hv QM ‘click’ EPR EPR BSM QM EPR EPR Lvovsky, Sanders, WT, Nature Photonics (2010); Simon et al., quant-ph (2010)
Quantum memory: dream and reality Different storage media and protocols * post selected Hedges et al., HBSM’09; DeRiedmatten et al., Nature (2008), Usmani et al., quant/ph (2010), Reim et al., Nature Photonics (2009), Longdell et al., PRL (2005)
Ghom absorption w p-pulse frequency p/2-pulse electric field amplitude v echo-pulse t t1 2t1 u u w=w0 w<w0 w>w0 p-pulse v w<w0 w>w0 dephasing rephasing echo at t=2t Storage of light using two-pulse photo-echoes Kopvil’em & Nagibarov, Fiz. Metall. Metalloved. (1963) Kurnit, Abella & Hartmann, Phys. Rev. Lett. (1964)
w v u Photon storage using two-pulse photo-echoes • Time-bin qubit (single photon) input: spontaneous emission adds significant noise • Pecho= Pnoise • rout =Frin+(1-F)rin • F= tr(rinrout) • = (Pecho+Pnoise)/(Pecho+ 2Pnoise) = 2/3 • = Fclassical(max) P(x) P(x) x x Ruggiero et al, PRA (2009); Sanguard, WT et al., quant-ph (2010), Massar &Popescu, PRL (1995)
Absorption inhom hom Frequency Rare-earth-ion doped crystals Stress and defects Inhomogeneous broadening • - transitions in the visible and at telecom wavelength • at 4 K: Ghom 50 Hz – 100 kHz, T2 up to 4 ms • Ground state coherence up to 30 s • - Ginhom 0.5 – 500 GHz RE ions have been usedextensively in for classicalstorage and data processing, and are wellsuited for CRIB and AFC-based quantum memory
Ghom absorption absorption opt. depth W frequency frequency frequency Photon-echo quantum memory (CRIB) • Preparation of an opticallythick, single absorption line • Controlledreversibleinhomogeneousbroadening (CRIB) • Absorption of light in arbitrary quantum state -> fastdephasing • Reduction of broadening to zero • Phase matching: f(z) = -2kz; EineikzEoute-ikz • Reestablishment of broadening, withreversedsign (interaction with external electric field) fi = Dit Di -> -Di i -> Time reversed evolution of atomic system and reemission of light in backward direction with unity efficiency and fidelity Moiseev et al., PRL (2001); Nilsson et al., Opt. Comm. (2005);Kraus, WT et al., PRA(2006); Alexanderet al.,PRL (2006); Hoseini et al., Nature 2009; Hedges et al., HBSM’09, WT et al., Las. Phot. Revs. (2010).
absorption absorption W frequency frequency Photon-echo quantum memory (AFC) • Preparation of an atomic frequency comb • Absorption of light in arbitrary quantum state -> fast dephasing and repetitive rephasing at tn =1/ncomb with 2pDitn= n 2p • Phase matching f(z) = -2kz enables backwards recall • Reversible mapping of optical coherence onto spin coherence allows recall on demand ncomb Ghom -> Reemission of light withunityefficiency and fidelity, very good multi-modestoragecapacities Hesselink et al., PRL (1979); Afzelius et al., PRA (2009); De Riedmatten et al., Nature. (2008); Afzeliuset al., PRL (2010); Usmani et al., quant-ph (2010).
Ti:Tm:LiNbO3 waveguides 80 ms 2.4 ms • Thulium • 795 nm zero phonon absorption line, Ghom ~200 kHz @3K • large, polarization and wavelength dependent optical depth (amin~2.2/cm @ 3K & 795.5 nm) • T1(3H4)=80 ms - optical pumping into magnetic ground-state sublevels (T1~sec @ B=150G & T=3K) • LiNbO3: • no inversion symmetry -> Stark shifting of resonance lines • “telecommunication” material, waveguide fabrication well mastered • Waveguide • - large Rabi frequencies • fast switching of large electric fields using closely spaced electrodes • - simplified integration with fibre optic components and into networks N. Sinclair, WT et al., J. Lumin. (2010)
The setup Laser AOM pol. mod. PBS t≥500 ps 795.5 nm Detector Tm:LiNbO3waveguide T=3K B=150 G Oscilloscope • - prepare AFC (10 –100 ms long pulse sequence) • wait 0.8 ms – 1 ms • send data to be stored • register transmitted and recalled data P al Width ~1/t time frequency frequency • fibre-to-fibre coupling loss ~15dB
Data storage – 20 ns long pulses Frequency comb Transmitted light 0.10 D 0.08 d1 g d0 0.06 opt. power (au) 0.04 Recalled light hinternal≈ 1.25 % 0.02 F=2, d0~1.1, d1~1.6 -> h ~ 1.6 % 0.00 -100 0 100 200 Time (ns)
Generation of broadband AFC Spectral width > GHz time
Data storage - 550 ps long pulses opt. power (au) echo, hinternal~5% 550 ps
Multi-mode storage opt. power (au) Detector response
Conclusion • AFC-based light storage in a Tm:LiNbO3 waveguide • Promising for integration • Broadband storage of light • Multi-mode storage • Internal storage efficiency ~5% • Fibre-to-fibre loss 15 dB • Next: • storage of time-bin qubits • storage of single photons & entangled time-bin qubits • explore unique possibilities of rapid electric field switching
Thank you Collaborations: Prof. W. Sohler