244 research outputs found
Measurement back-action and spin noise spectroscopy in a charged cavity-QED device in the strong coupling regime
We study theoretically the spin-induced and photon-induced fluctuations of
optical signals from a singly-charged quantum dot-microcavity structure. We
identify the respective contributions of the photon-polariton interactions, in
the strong light-matter coupling regime, and of the quantum back-action induced
by photon detection on the spin system. Strong spin projection by a single
photon is shown to be achievable, allowing the initialization and measurement
of a fully-polarized Larmor precession. The spectrum of second-order
correlations is deduced, displaying information on both spin and quantum
dot-cavity dynamics. The presented theory thus bridges the gap between the
fields of spin noise spectroscopy and quantum optics.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Quantum dot-cavity strong-coupling regime measured through coherent reflection spectroscopy in a very high-Q micropillar
We report on the coherent reflection spectroscopy of a high-quality factor
micropillar, in the strong coupling regime with a single InGaAs annealed
quantum dot. The absolute reflectivity measurement is used to study the
characteristics of our device at low and high excitation power. The strong
coupling is obtained with a g=16 \mueV coupling strength in a 7.3\mum diameter
micropillar, with a cavity spectral width kappa=20.5 \mueV (Q=65 000). The
factor of merit of the strong-coupling regime, 4g/kappa=3, is the current
state-of-the-art for a quantum dot-micropillar system
Accurate measurement of a 96% input coupling into a cavity using polarization tomography
Pillar microcavities are excellent light-matter interfaces providing an
electromagnetic confinement in small mode volumes with high quality factors.
They also allow the efficient injection and extraction of photons, into and
from the cavity, with potentially near-unity input and output-coupling
efficiencies. Optimizing the input and output coupling is essential, in
particular, in the development of solid-state quantum networks where artificial
atoms are manipulated with single incoming photons. Here we propose a technique
to accurately measure input and output coupling efficiencies using polarization
tomography of the light reflected by the cavity. We use the residual
birefringence of pillar microcavities to distinguish the light coupled to the
cavity from the uncoupled light: the former participates to rotating the
polarization of the reflected beam, while the latter decreases the polarization
purity. Applying this technique to a micropillar cavity, we measure a output coupling and a input coupling with unprecedented
precision.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Frequency cavity pulling induced by a single semiconductor quantum dot
We investigate the emission properties of a single semiconductor quantum dot
deterministically coupled to a confined optical mode in the weak coupling
regime. A strong pulling, broadening and narrowing of the cavity mode emission
is evidenced when changing the spectral detuning between the emitter and the
cavity. These features are theoretically accounted for by considering the
phonon assisted emission of the quantum dot transition. These observations
highlight a new situation for cavity quantum electrodynamics involving
spectrally broad emitters
Controlled light-matter coupling for a single quantum dot embedded in a pillar microcavity using far-field optical lithography
Using far field optical lithography, a single quantum dot is positioned
within a pillar microcavity with a 50 nm accuracy. The lithography is performed
in-situ at 10 K while measuring the quantum dot emission. Deterministic
spectral and spatial matching of the cavity-dot system is achieved in a single
step process and evidenced by the observation of strong Purcell effect.
Deterministic coupling of two quantum dots to the same optical mode is
achieved, a milestone for quantum computing.Comment: Modified version: new title, additional experimental data in figure
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