26 research outputs found
Heralded multiphoton states with coherent spin interactions in waveguide QED
WaveguideQEDoffers the possibility of generating strong coherent atomic
interactions either through appropriate atomic configurations in the
dissipative regime or in the bandgap regime. In this work, we show how to
harness these interactions in order to herald the generation of highly
entangled atomic states, which afterwards can be mapped to generate single mode
multi-photonic states with high fidelities.Weintroduce two protocols for the
preparation of the atomic states, we discuss their performance and compare them
to previous proposals. In particular, we show that one of them reaches high
probability of success for systems with many atoms but low Purcell factors
Deterministic generation of arbitrary photonic states assisted by dissipation
A scheme to utilize atom-like emitters coupled to nanophotonic waveguides is
proposed for the generation of many-body entangled states and for the
reversible mapping of these states of matter to photonic states of an optical
pulse in the waveguide. Our protocol makes use of decoherence-free subspaces
(DFS) for the atomic emitters with coherent evolution within the DFS enforced
by strong dissipative coupling to the waveguide. By switching from subradiant
to superradiant states, entangled atomic states are mapped to photonic states
with high fidelity. An implementation using ultracold atoms coupled to a
photonic crystal waveguide is discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Universal quantum computation in waveguide QED using decoherence free subspaces
The interaction of quantum emitters with one-dimensional photon-like reservoirs induces strong and long-range dissipative couplings that give rise to the emergence of the so-called decoherence free subspaces (DFSs) which are decoupled from dissipation. When introducing weak perturbations on the emitters, e.g., driving, the strong collective dissipation enforces an effective coherent evolution within the DFS. In this work, we show explicitly how by introducing single-site resolved drivings, we can use the effective dynamics within the DFS to design a universal set of one and two-qubit gates within the DFS of an ensemble of two-level atom-like systems. Using Liouvillian perturbation theory we calculate the scaling with the relevant figures of merit of the systems, such as the Purcell factor and imperfect control of the drivings. Finally, we compare our results with previous proposals using atomic Λ systems in leaky cavities
Quantum metrology with one-dimensional superradiant photonic states
Photonic states with large and fixed photon numbers, such as Fock states,
enable quantum-enhanced metrology but remain an experimentally elusive
resource. A potentially simple, deterministic and scalable way to generate
these states consists of fully exciting quantum emitters equally coupled to
a common photonic reservoir, which leads to a collective decay known as Dicke
superradiance. The emitted -photon state turns out to be a highly entangled
multimode state, and to characterise its metrological properties in this work
we: (i) develop theoretical tools to compute the Quantum Fisher Information of
general multimode photonic states; (ii) use it to show that Dicke superradiant
photons in 1D waveguides achieve Heisenberg scaling, which can be saturated by
a parity measurement; (iii) and study the robustness of these states to
experimental limitations in state-of-art atom-waveguide QED setups.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures. v2: substantially improved version with new
result
Generation of single and two-mode multiphoton states in waveguide QED
Single and two-mode multiphoton states are the cornerstone of many quantum
technologies, e.g., metrology. In the optical regime these states are generally
obtained combining heralded single-photons with linear optics tools and
post-selection, leading to inherent low success probabilities. In a recent
paper, we design several protocols that harness the long-range atomic
interactions induced in waveguide QED to improve fidelities and protocols of
single-mode multiphoton emission. Here, we give full details of these
protocols, revisit them to simplify some of their requirements and also extend
them to generate two-mode multiphoton states, such as Yurke or NOON states.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Efficient Multiphoton Generation in Waveguide Quantum Electrodynamics
Engineering quantum states of light is at the basis of many quantum technologies such as quantum cryptography, teleportation, or metrology among others. Though, single photons can be generated in many scenarios, the efficient and reliable generation of complex single-mode multiphoton states is still a long-standing goal in the field, as current methods either suffer from low fidelities or small probabilities. Here we discuss several protocols which harness the strong and long-range atomic interactions induced by waveguide QED to efficiently load excitations in a collection of atoms, which can then be triggered to produce the desired multiphoton state. In order to boost the success probability and fidelity of each excitation process, atoms are used to both generate the excitations in the rest, as well as to herald the successful generation. Furthermore, to overcome the exponential scaling of the probability of success with the number of excitations, we design a protocol to merge excitations that are present in different internal atomic levels with a polynomial scaling
Generation of single- and two-mode multiphoton states in waveguide QED
Single- and two-mode multiphoton states are the cornerstone of many quantum technologies, e.g., metrology. In the optical regime, these states are generally obtained combining heralded single photons with linear optics tools and post-selection, leading to inherent low success probabilities. In a recent paper [A. González-Tudela et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 213601 (2017)], we design several protocols that harness the long-range atomic interactions induced in waveguide QED to improve fidelities and protocols of single-mode multiphoton emission. Here, we give full details of these protocols, revisit them to simplify some of their requirements, and also extend them to generate two-mode multiphoton states, such as Yurke or NOON states