2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session J43: Focus Session: Materials for Quantum Information Processing II
11:15 AM–2:03 PM,
Tuesday, March 6, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: 506
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Bruce Kane, University of Maryland
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.J43.1
Abstract: J43.00001 : Solid-state materials and devices for single-photon generation and more
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Charles Santori
(Hewlett-Packard)
A single-photon device, which ideally emits exactly one photon on demand
into a definite quantum state, can be constructed from a single atom or
atom-like system excited by optical pulses and coupled to an optical
micro-cavity. Solid-state single quantum systems are especially practical
for this application because they do not require complicated trapping setups
and can be integrated into monolithic micro-cavity structures. In the last
several years single-photon generation has been demonstrated in a variety of
solid-state systems including nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond,
epitaxial quantum dots in semiconductors such as InGaAs or AlGaN, and
impurities in semiconductors. A variety of microcavity geometries have also
been employed to improve photon extraction efficiency and to increase the
spontaneous emission rate, including micro-pillars with
distributed-Bragg-reflector mirrors, micro-disks and photonic crystal
cavities. Results from various systems will be summarized and compared in
terms of the suppression of the two-photon emission probability (compared
with a Poisson distribution), efficiency, and quantum indistinguishability
of the generated photon wave packets.
A device that efficiently produces single photons with high spectral purity
can also be used in other ways. For example, two photons incident onto such
a device should in theory exhibit a strong optical nonlinearity. In
addition, if the device uses a three-level Lambda-type system in which two
lower long-lived levels are coupled by optical transitions to a common
excited state, the possibility exists for efficient matter-photon quantum
state inter-conversion, an important ingredient for quantum networks and
other applications. It has recently been demonstrated that two solid-state
systems, charged quantum dots and nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond, have
the required level structure for this scheme. Recent results demonstrating
coherent population trapping in single NV centers will be described which
are promising in terms of optical manipulation of single spins and
eventually spin-photon inter-conversion.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.J43.1