75 research outputs found
Stimulated and spontaneous four-wave mixing in silicon-on-insulator coupled photonic wire nano-cavities
We report on four-wave mixing in coupled photonic crystal nano-cavities on a
silicon-on-insulator platform. Three photonic wire cavities are side-coupled to
obtain three modes equally separated in energy. The structure is designed to be
self-filtering, and we show that the pump is rejected by almost two orders of
magnitudes. We study both the stimulated and the spontaneous four-wave mixing
processes: owing to the small modal volume, we find that signal and idler
photons are generated with a hundred-fold increase in efficiency as compared to
silicon micro-ring resonators
Ultra-low threshold polariton lasing in photonic crystal cavities
The authors show clear experimental evidence of lasing of exciton polaritons
confined in L3 photonic crystal cavities. The samples are based on an InP
membrane in air containing five InAsP quantum wells. Polariton lasing is
observed with thresholds as low as 120 nW, below the Mott transition, while
conventional photon lasing is observed for a pumping power one to three orders
of magnitude higher.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A linear photonic swap test circuit for quantum kernel estimation
Among supervised learning models, Support Vector Machine stands out as one of
the most robust and efficient models for classifying data clusters. At the core
of this method, a kernel function is employed to calculate the distance between
different elements of the dataset, allowing for their classification. Since
every kernel function can be expressed as a scalar product, we can estimate it
using Quantum Mechanics, where probability amplitudes and scalar products are
fundamental objects. The swap test, indeed, is a quantum algorithm capable of
computing the scalar product of two arbitrary wavefunctions, potentially
enabling a quantum speed-up. Here, we present an integrated photonic circuit
designed to implement the swap test algorithm. Our approach relies solely on
linear optical integrated components and qudits, represented by single photons
from an attenuated laser beam propagating through a set of waveguides. By
utilizing 2 spatial degrees of freedom for the qudits, we can configure all
the necessary arrangements to set any two-qubits state and perform the swap
test. This simplifies the requirements on the circuitry elements and eliminates
the need for non-linearity, heralding, or post-selection to achieve
multi-qubits gates. Our photonic swap test circuit successfully encodes two
qubits and estimates their scalar product with a measured root mean square
error smaller than 0.05. This result paves the way for the development of
integrated photonic architectures capable of performing Quantum Machine
Learning tasks with robust devices operating at room temperature
Ultra-low power generation of twin photons in a compact silicon ring resonator
We demonstrate efficient generation of correlated photon pairs by spontaneous
four wave mixing in a 5 \mu m radius silicon ring resonator in the telecom band
around 1550 nm. By optically pumping our device with a 200 \mu W continuous
wave laser, we obtain a pair generation rate of 0.2 MHz and demonstrate photon
time correlations with a coincidence-to-accidental ratio as high as 250. The
results are in good agreement with theoretical predictions and show the
potential of silicon micro-ring resonators as room temperature sources for
integrated quantum optics applications.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
SiN integrated photonic components in the Visible to Near-Infrared spectral region
Integrated photonics has emerged as one of the most promising platforms for
quantum applications. The performances of quantum photonic integrated circuits
(QPIC) necessitate a demanding optimization to achieve enhanced properties and
tailored characteristics with more stringent requirements with respect to their
classical counterparts. In this study, we report on the simulation,
fabrication, and characterization of a series of fundamental components for
photons manipulation in QPIC based on silicon nitride. These include crossing
waveguides, multimode-interferometer-based integrated beam splitters (MMIs),
asymmetric integrated Mach-Zehnder interferometers (MZIs) based on MMIs, and
micro-ring resonators. Our investigation revolves primarily around the Visible
to Near-Infrared spectral region, as these devices are meticulously designed
and tailored for optimal operation within this wavelength range. By advancing
the development of these elementary building blocks, we aim to pave the way for
significant improvements in QPIC in a spectral region only little explored so
far.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Micrometer-scale integrated silicon source of time-energy entangled photons
Entanglement is a fundamental resource in quantum information processing. Several studies have explored the integration of sources of entangled states on a silicon chip, but the devices demonstrated so far require millimeter lengths and pump powers of the order of hundreds of milliwatts to produce an appreciable photon flux, hindering their scalability and dense integration. Microring resonators have been shown to be efficient sources of photon pairs, but entangled state emission has never been proven in these devices. Here we report the first demonstration, to the best of our knowledge, of a microring resonator capable of emitting time-energy entangled photons. We use a Franson experiment to show a violation of Bell’s inequality by more than seven standard deviations with an internal pair generation exceeding 107 Hz. The source is integrated on a silicon chip, operates at milliwatt and submilliwatt pump power, emits in the telecom band, and outputs into a photonic waveguide. These are all essential features of an entangled state emitter for a quantum photonic network
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