87 research outputs found

    Efficiency optimization for Atomic Frequency Comb storage

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    We study the efficiency of the Atomic Frequency Comb storage protocol. We show that for a given optical depth, the preparation procedure can be optimize to significantly improve the retrieval. Our prediction is well supported by the experimental implementation of the protocol in a \TMYAG crystal. We observe a net gain in efficiency from 10% to 17% by applying the optimized preparation procedure. In the perspective of high bandwidth storage, we investigate the protocol under different magnetic fields. We analyze the effect of the Zeeman and superhyperfine interaction

    Rephasing processes and quantum memory for light: reversibility issues and how to fix them

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    Time reversibility is absent from some recently proposed quantum memory protocols such as Absorption Frequency Comb (AFC). Focusing on AFC memory, we show that quantum efficiency and fidelity are reduced dramatically, as a consequence of non-reversibility, when the spectral width of the incoming signal approaches the memory bandwidth. Non-reversibility is revealed through spectral dispersion, giving rise to phase mismatching. We propose a modified AFC scheme that restores reversibility. This way, signals can be retrieved with excellent efficiency over the entire memory bandwidth. This study could be extended to other quantum memory rephasing schemes in inhomogeneously broadened absorbing media.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, was presented in 20th International Laser Physics Workshop (LPHYS'11), July 11-15, 2011, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovin

    Optical study of the anisotropic erbium spin flip-flop dynamics

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    We investigate the erbium flip-flop dynamics as a limiting factor of the electron spin lifetime and more generally as an indirect source of decoherence in rare-earth doped insulators. Despite the random isotropic arrangement of dopants in the host crystal, the dipolar interaction strongly depends on the magnetic field orientation following the strong anisotropy of the gg-factor. In Er3+^{3+}:Y2_2SiO5_5, we observe by transient optical spectroscopy a three orders of magnitude variation of the erbium flip-flop rate (10ppm dopant concentration). The measurements in two different samples, with 10ppm and 50ppm concentrations, are well-supported by our analytic modeling of the dipolar coupling between identical spins with an anisotropic gg-tensor. The model can be applied to other rare-earth doped materials. We extrapolate the calculation to Er3+^{3+}:CaWO4_4, Er3+^{3+}:LiNbO3_3 and Nd3+^{3+}:Y2_2SiO5_5 at different concentrations

    Superhyperfine induced photon-echo collapse of erbium in Y2_2SiO5_5

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    We investigate the decoherence of Er3+^{3+} in Y2_2SiO5_5 at low magnetic fields using the photon-echo technique. We reproduce accurately a variety of the decay curves with a unique coherence time by considering the so-called superhyperfine modulation induced by a large number of neighbouring spins. There is no need to invoke any characteristic time of the spin fluctuations to reproduce very different decay curves. The number of involved nuclei increases when the magnetic is lowered. The experiment is compared with a model associating 100 surrounding ions with their exact positions in the crystal frame. We also derive an approximate spherical model (angular averaging) to interpret the main feature the observed decay curves close to zero-field

    Optical measurement of heteronuclear cross-relaxation interactions in Tm:YAG

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    We investigate cross-relaxation interactions between Tm and Al in Tm:YAG using two optical methods: spectral holeburning and stimulated echoes. These interactions lead to a reduction in the hyperfine lifetime at magnetic fields that bring the Tm hyperfine transition into resonance with an Al transition. We develop models for measured echo decay curves and holeburning spectra near a resonance, which are used to show that the Tm-Al interaction has a resonance width of 10~kHz and reduces the hyperfine lifetime to 0.5 ms. The antihole structure is consistent with an interaction dominated by the Al nearest neighbors at 3.0 Angstroms, with some contribution from the next nearest neighbors at 3.6 Angstroms.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure

    Revival of Silenced Echo and Quantum Memory for Light

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    We propose an original quantum memory protocol. It belongs to the class of rephasing processes and is closely related to two-pulse photon echo. It is known that the strong population inversion produced by the rephasing pulse prevents the plain two-pulse photon echo from serving as a quantum memory scheme. Indeed gain and spontaneous emission generate prohibitive noise. A second π\pi-pulse can be used to simultaneously reverse the atomic phase and bring the atoms back into the ground state. Then a secondary echo is radiated from a non-inverted medium, avoiding contamination by gain and spontaneous emission noise. However, one must kill the primary echo, in order to preserve all the information for the secondary signal. In the present work, spatial phase mismatching is used to silence the standard two-pulse echo. An experimental demonstration is presented.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure

    Efficient light storage in a crystal using an Atomic Frequency Comb

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    We demonstrate efficient and reversible mapping of a light field onto a thulium-doped crystal using an atomic frequency comb (AFC). Thanks to an accurate spectral preparation of the sample, we reach an efficiency of 9%. Our interpretation of the data is based on an original spectral analysis of the AFC. By independently measuring the absorption spectrum, we show that the efficiency is both limited by the available optical thickness and the preparation procedure at large absorption depth for a given bandwidth. The experiment is repeated with less than one photon per pulse and single photon counting detectors. We clearly observe that the AFC protocol is compatible with the noise level required for weak quantum field storage

    Realistic theory of electromagnetically-induced transparency and slow light in a hot vapor of atoms undergoing collisions

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    We present a realistic theoretical treatment of a three-level Λ\Lambda system in a hot atomic vapor interacting with a coupling and a probe field of arbitrary strengths, leading to electromagnetically-induced transparency and slow light under the two-photon resonance condition. We take into account all the relevant decoherence processes including col5Blisions. Velocity-changing collisions (VCCs) are modeled in the strong collision limit effectively, which helps in achieving optical pumping by the coupling beam across the entire Doppler profile. The steady-state expressions for the atomic density-matrix elements are numerically evaluated to yield the experimentally measured response characteristics. The predictions, taking into account a dynamic rate of influx of atoms in the two lower levels of the Λ\Lambda, are in excellent agreement with the reported experimental results for 4^4He*. The role played by the VCC parameter is seen to be distinct from that by the transit time or Raman coherence decay rate

    Operating an atom interferometer beyond its linear range

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    In this paper, we show that an atom interferometer inertial sensor, when associated to the auxiliary measurement of external vibrations, can be operated beyond its linear range and still keep a high acceleration sensitivity. We propose and compare two measurement procedures (fringe fitting and nonlinear lock) that can be used to extract the mean phase of the interferometer when the interferometer phase fluctuations exceed 2π2\pi. Despite operating in the urban environment of inner Paris without any vibration isolation, the use of a low noise seismometer for the measurement of ground vibrations allows our atom gravimeter to reach at night a sensitivity as good as 5.5×1085.5\times10^{-8}g at 1 s. Robustness of the measurement to large vibration noise is also demonstrated by the ability of our gravimeter to operate during an earthquake with excellent sensitivity. Our high repetition rate allows for recovering the true low frequency seismic vibrations, ensuring proper averaging. Such techniques open new perspectives for applications in other fields, such as navigation and geophysics.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure

    Transportable laser system for atom interferometry

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    Soumis à Optics LettersWe describe an optical bench in which we lock the relative frequencies or phases of a set of three lasers in order to use them in a cold atoms interferometry experiment. As a new feature, the same two lasers serve alternately to cool atoms and to realize the atomic interferometer. This requires a fast change of the optical frequencies over a few GHz. The number of required independent laser sources is then only 3, which enables the construction of the whole laser system on a single transportable optical bench. Recent results obtained with this optical setup are also presented
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