105 research outputs found

    Entanglement creation in a quantum dot-nanocavity system

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    We explore the possibility to entangle an excitonic two-level system in a semiconductor quantum dot (QD) with a cavity defined on a photonic crystal by sweeping the cavity frequency across its resonance with the exciton transition. The dynamic cavity detuning is established by a radio frequency surface acoustic wave (SAW). It induces Landau-Zener (LZ) transitions between the excitonic and the photonic degrees of freedom and thereby creates a superposition state. We optimize this scheme by using tailored Fourier-synthesized SAW pulses with up to five harmonics. The theoretical study is performed with a master equation approach for present state-of-the-art setups. Assuming experimentally demonstrated system parameters, we demonstrate that the composed pulses increase both the maximum entanglement and its persistence. The latter is only limited by the dominant dephasing mechanism; i.e., the photon loss from the cavity.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Ion beam synthesis of nanothermochromic diffraction gratings with giant switching contrast at telecom wavelengths

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    Nanothermochromic diffraction gratings based on the metal-insulator transition of VO2\mathrm{VO_2} are fabricated by site-selective ion beam implantation in a SiO2\mathrm{SiO_2} matrix. Gratings were defined either (i) directly by spatially selective ion beam synthesis or (ii) by site-selective deactivation of the phase transition by ion beam induced defects. The strongest increase of the diffracted light intensities was observed at a wavelength of 1550\,nm exceeding a factor of 20 for the selectively deactivated gratings. The observed pronounced thermal hysteresis extending down close to room temperature makes this system ideally suited for optical memory applications.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table - corrected Figure

    Site-selective ion beam synthesis and optical properties of individual CdSe nanocrystal quantum dots in a SiO2 matrix

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    Cadmium selenide nanocrystal quantum dots (NC-QDs) are site-selectively synthesized by sequential ion beam implantation of selenium and cadmium ions in a SiO2 matrix through sub-micron apertures followed by a rapid thermal annealing step. The size, areal density and optical emission energy of the NC-QDs are controlled by the ion fluence during implantation and the diameter of implantation aperture. For low fluences and small apertures the emission of these optically active emitters is blue-shifted compared to that of the bulk material by >100 meV>100\,{\rm meV} due to quantum confinement. The emission exhibits spectral diffusion and blinking on a second timescales as established also for solution synthesized NC-QDs

    A hybrid (Al)GaAs-LiNbO3 surface acoustic wave resonator for cavity quantum dot optomechanics

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    A hybrid device comprising a (Al)GaAs quantum dot heterostructure and a LiNbO3_3 surface acoustic wave resonator is fabricated by heterointegration. High acoustic quality factors Q>4000Q>4000 are demonstrated for an operation frequency f≈300f\approx 300 MHz. The measured large quality factor-frequency products Q×f>1012Q\times f>10^{12} ensures the suppression of decoherence due to thermal noise for temperatures exceeding T>50 KT>50\,\mathrm{K}. Frequency and position dependent optomechanical coupling of single quantum dots and the resonator modes is observed.Comment: Accepted manuscrip

    Dynamic modulation of photonic crystal nanocavities using gigahertz acoustic phonons

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    Photonic crystal membranes (PCM) provide a versatile planar platform for on-chip implementations of photonic quantum circuits. One prominent quantum element is a coupled system consisting of a nanocavity and a single quantum dot (QD) which forms a fundamental building block for elaborate quantum information networks and a cavity quantum electrodynamic (cQED) system controlled by single photons. So far no fast tuning mechanism is available to achieve control within the system coherence time. Here we demonstrate dynamic tuning by monochromatic coherent acoustic phonons formed by a surface acoustic wave (SAW) with frequencies exceeding 1.7 gigahertz, one order of magnitude faster than alternative approaches. We resolve a periodic modulation of the optical mode exceeding eight times its linewidth, preserving both the spatial mode profile and a high quality factor. Since PCMs confine photonic and phononic excitations, coupling optical to acoustic frequencies, our technique opens ways towards coherent acoustic control of optomechanical crystals.Comment: 11 pages 4 figure

    Dynamic acousto-mechanical control of a strongly coupled photonic molecule

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    Two-dimensional photonic crystal membranes provide a versatile planar architecture for integrated photonics to control the propagation of light on a chip employing high quality optical cavities, waveguides, beamsplitters or dispersive elements. When combined with highly non-linear quantum emitters, quantum photonic networks operating at the single photon level come within reach. Towards large-scale quantum photonic networks, selective dynamic control of individual components and deterministic interactions between different constituents are of paramount importance. This indeed calls for switching speeds ultimately on the system's native timescales. For example, manipulation via electric fields or all-optical means have been employed for switching in nanophotonic circuits and cavity quantum electrodynamics studies. Here, we demonstrate dynamic control of the coherent interaction between two coupled photonic crystal nanocavities forming a photonic molecule. By using an electrically generated radio frequency surface acoustic wave we achieve optomechanical tuning, demonstrate operating speeds more than three orders of magnitude faster than resonant mechanical approaches. Moreover, the tuning range is large enough to compensate for the inherent fabrication-related cavity mode detuning. Our findings open a route towards nanomechanically gated protocols, which hitherto have inhibited the realization in all-optical schemes.Comment: submitted manuscrip

    Electrical control of inter-dot electron tunneling in a quantum dot molecule

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    We employ ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy to directly monitor electron tunneling between discrete orbital states in a pair of spatially separated quantum dots. Immediately after excitation, several peaks are observed in the pump-probe spectrum due to Coulomb interactions between the photo-generated charge carriers. By tuning the relative energy of the orbital states in the two dots and monitoring the temporal evolution of the pump-probe spectra the electron and hole tunneling times are separately measured and resonant tunneling between the two dots is shown to be mediated both by elastic and inelastic processes. Ultrafast (< 5 ps) inter-dot tunneling is shown to occur over a surprisingly wide bandwidth, up to ~8 meV, reflecting the spectrum of exciton-acoustic phonon coupling in the system

    A frequency-tunable nanomembrane mechanical oscillator with embedded quantum dots

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    Hybrid systems consisting of a quantum emitter coupled to a mechanical oscillator are receiving increasing attention for fundamental science and potential applications in quantum technologies. In contrast to most of the presented works, in which the oscillator eigenfrequencies are irreversibly determined by the fabrication process, we present here a simple approach to obtain frequency-tunable mechanical resonators based on suspended nanomembranes. The method relies on a micromachined piezoelectric actuator, which we use both to drive resonant oscillations of a suspended Ga(Al)As membrane with embedded quantum dots and to fine tune their mechanical eigenfrequencies. Specifically, we excite oscillations with frequencies of at least 60 MHz by applying an AC voltage to the actuator and tune the eigenfrequencies by at least 25 times their linewidth by continuously varying the elastic stress state in the membranes through a DC voltage. The light emitted by optically excited quantum dots is used as sensitive local strain gauge to monitor the oscillation frequency and amplitude. We expect that our method has the potential to be applicable to other optomechanical systems based on dielectric and semiconductor membranes possibly operating in the quantum regime.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
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