37 research outputs found
Generation of frequency sidebands on single photons with indistinguishability from quantum dots
Generation and manipulation of the quantum state of a single photon is at the
heart of many quantum information protocols. There has been growing interest in
using phase modulators as quantum optics devices that preserve coherence. In
this Letter, we have used an electro-optic phase modulator to shape the state
vector of single photons emitted by a quantum dot to generate new frequency
components (modes) and explicitly demonstrate that the phase modulation process
agrees with the theoretical prediction at a single photon level. Through
two-photon interference measurements we show that for an output consisting of
three modes (the original mode and two sidebands), the indistinguishability of
the mode engineered photon, measured through the secondorder intensity
correlation (g2(0)) is preserved. This work demonstrates a robust means to
generate a photonic qubit or more complex state (e.g., a qutrit) for quantum
communication applications by encoding information in the sidebands without the
loss of coherence
Non-local nuclear spin quieting in quantum dot molecules: Optically-induced extended two-electron spin coherence time
We demonstrate the extension of coherence between all four two-electron spin
ground states of an InAs quantum dot molecule (QDM) via non-local suppression
of nuclear spin fluctuations in both constituent quantum dots (QDs), while
optically addressing only the upper QD transitions. Long coherence times are
revealed through dark-state spectroscopy as resulting from nuclear spin locking
mediated by the exchange interaction between the QDs. Lineshape analysis
provides the first measurement of the quieting of the Overhauser field
distribution correlating with reduced nuclear spin fluctuations.Comment: Supplementary materials can be found on the publication page of our
website. http://research.physics.lsa.umich.edu/dst/Publications.htm
Optical Spin Initialization and Non-Destructive Measurement in a Quantum Dot Molecule
The spin of an electron in a self-assembled InAs/GaAs quantum dot molecule is
optically prepared and measured through the trion triplet states. A
longitudinal magnetic field is used to tune two of the trion states into
resonance, forming a superposition state through asymmetric spin exchange. As a
result, spin-flip Raman transitions can be used for optical spin
initialization, while separate trion states enable cycling transitions for
non-destructive measurement. With two-laser transmission spectroscopy we
demonstrate both operations simultaneously, something not previously
accomplished in a single quantum dot.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Effect of strain and variable mass on the formation of antibonding hole ground states in InAs quantum dot molecules
Using four-band k·p Hamiltonians, we study how biaxial strain and position-dependent effective masses influence hole tunneling in vertically coupled InAs/GaAs quantum dots. Strain reduces the tunneling and hence the critical interdot distance required for the ground state to change from bonding to antibonding. The reduced spin-orbit interaction in the GaAs matrix, which we account for using position-dependent Luttinger parameters, has the opposite effect. This compensation results in the critical distance being little affected. The possibility to induce the bonding-to-antibonding transition using longitudinal magnetic fields is also investigated. Luttinger- Kohn Hamiltonian predicts a magnetic enhancement of the heavy hole-light hole coupling which, in turn, leads to such transition. No such effect is, however, observed in magnetophotoluminescence experiments. An alter- native implementation of the magnetic field in the envelope function Hamiltonian is given which retrieves the experimental behavior