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      A solid state light-matter interface at the single photon level

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          Abstract

          Coherent and reversible mapping of quantum information between light and matter is an important experimental challenge in quantum information science. In particular, it is a decisive milestone for the implementation of quantum networks and quantum repeaters. So far, quantum interfaces between light and atoms have been demonstrated with atomic gases, and with single trapped atoms in cavities. Here we demonstrate the coherent and reversible mapping of a light field with less than one photon per pulse onto an ensemble of 10 millions atoms naturally trapped in a solid. This is achieved by coherently absorbing the light field in a suitably prepared solid state atomic medium. The state of the light is mapped onto collective atomic excitations on an optical transition and stored for a pre-programmed time up of to 1 mu s before being released in a well defined spatio-temporal mode as a result of a collective interference. The coherence of the process is verified by performing an interference experiment with two stored weak pulses with a variable phase relation. Visibilities of more than 95% are obtained, which demonstrates the high coherence of the mapping process at the single photon level. In addition, we show experimentally that our interface allows one to store and retrieve light fields in multiple temporal modes. Our results represent the first observation of collective enhancement at the single photon level in a solid and open the way to multimode solid state quantum memories as a promising alternative to atomic gases.

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          Long-distance quantum communication with atomic ensembles and linear optics

          , , (2001)
          Quantum communication holds a promise for absolutely secure transmission of secret messages and faithful transfer of unknown quantum states. Photonic channels appear to be very attractive for physical implementation of quantum communication. However, due to losses and decoherence in the channel, the communication fidelity decreases exponentially with the channel length. We describe a scheme that allows to implement robust quantum communication over long lossy channels. The scheme involves laser manipulation of atomic ensembles, beam splitters, and single-photon detectors with moderate efficiencies, and therefore well fits the status of the current experimental technology. We show that the communication efficiency scale polynomially with the channel length thereby facilitating scalability to very long distances.
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            Experimental demonstration of quantum memory for light

            The information carrier of today's communications, a weak pulse of light, is an intrinsically quantum object. As a consequence, complete information about the pulse cannot, even in principle, be perfectly recorded in a classical memory. In the field of quantum information this has led to a long standing challenge: how to achieve a high-fidelity transfer of an independently prepared quantum state of light onto the atomic quantum state? Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate a protocol for such quantum memory based on atomic ensembles. We demonstrate for the first time a recording of an externally provided quantum state of light onto the atomic quantum memory with a fidelity up to 70%, significantly higher than that for the classical recording. Quantum storage of light is achieved in three steps: an interaction of light with atoms, the subsequent measurement on the transmitted light, and the feedback onto the atoms conditioned on the measurement result. Density of recorded states 33% higher than that for the best classical recording of light on atoms is achieved. A quantum memory lifetime of up to 4 msec is demonstrated.
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              Solid state quantum memory using complete absorption and re-emission of photons by tailored and externally controlled inhomogeneous absorption profiles

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2008-10-03
                Article
                10.1038/nature07607
                19079056
                0810.0630
                d26cd4c9-787a-4e19-aad2-4bd6520df52b

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Nature 456, 773 (2008)
                5 pages, 5 figures, version submitted on June 27 2008
                quant-ph

                Quantum physics & Field theory
                Quantum physics & Field theory

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