45 research outputs found

    Improving single-photon sources with Stark tuning

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    We investigate the use of the Stark shift in atomlike systems in order to control the interaction with a high-Q/V microcavity. By applying a Stark shift pulse to a single atomlike system, in order to affect and control its detuning from a cavity resonance, the cavity QED interaction can be carefully controlled so as to allow stochastic pumping of the emitting state without causing random timing jitter in the output photon. Using a quantum trajectory approach, we conduct simulations that show this technique is capable of producing indistinguishable single photons that exhibit complete Hong-Ou-Mandel interference. Furthermore, Stark tuning control allows for the generation of arbitrary pulse envelopes. We demonstrate this by showing that a simple asymmetric Stark shifting pulse can lead to the emission of symmetric Gaussian single-photon pulse envelopes, rather than the usual exponential decay. These Gaussian pulses also exhibit complete Hong-Ou-Mandel interference. The use of Stark shifting in solid-state systems could ultimately provide the cheap miniature high quality single-photon sources that are currently required for applications such as all-optical quantum computing

    Sensitive detection of sodium in a flame using parametric four-wave mixing and seeded parametric four-wave mixing

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    Two-photon resonant parametric four-wave mixing and a newly developed variant called seeded parametric four-wave mixing are used to detect trace quantities of sodium in a flame. Both techniques are simple, requiring only a single laser to generate a signal beam at a different wavelength which propagates collinearly with the pump beam, allowing efficient signal recovery. A comparison of the two techniques reveals that seeded parametric four-wave mixing is more than two orders of magnitude more sensitive than parametric four-wave mixing, with an estimated detection sensitivity of 5 x 10(9) atoms/cm(3). Seeded parametric four-wave mixing is achieved by cascading two parametric four-wave mixing media such that one of the parametric fields generated in the first high-density medium is then used to seed the same four-wave mixing process in a second medium in order to increase the four-wave mixing gain. The behavior of this seeded parametric four-wave mixing is described using semiclassical perturbation theory. A simplified small-signal theory is found to model most of the data satisfactorily. However, an anomalous saturationlike behavior is observed in the large signal regime. The full perturbation treatment, which includes the competition between two different four-wave mixing processes coupled via the signal field, accounts for this apparently anomalous behavior

    Polarised Photoluminescence from Surface-Passivated PbS Nanocrystals

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    Effective surface-passivation of PbS nanocrystals in aqueous colloidal solution has been achieved following treatment with CdS precursors. The resultant photoluminescent emission displays two distinct components, one originating from the absorption band-edge and the other from above the absorption band-edge. We show that both of these components are strongly polarised but display distinctly different behaviours. The polarisation arising from the band-edge shows little dependence on the excitation energy while the polarisation of the above-band-edge component is strongly dependent on the excitation energy. In addition, time resolved polarisation spectroscopy reveals that the above-band-edge polarisation is restricted to the first couple of nanoseconds, while the band-edge polarisation is nearly constant over hundreds of nanoseconds. We recognise an incompatibility between the two different polarisation behaviours, which enables us to identify two distinct types of surface-passivated PbS nanocrystal.Comment: Preprint, 19 pages, 4 figure

    Infrared seeded parametric four-wave mixing for sensitive detection of molecules

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    We have developed a sensitive resonant four-wave mixing technique based on two-photon parametric four-wave mixing with the addition of a phase matched ''seeder'' field. Generation of the seeder field via the same four-wave mixing process in a high pressure cell enables automatic phase matching to be achieved in a low pressure sample cell. This arrangement facilitates sensitive detection of complex molecular spectra by simply tuning the pump laser. We demonstrate the technique with the detection of nitric oxide down to concentrations more than 4 orders of magnitude below the capability of parametric four-wave mixing alone, with an estimated detection threshold of 10(12) molecules/cm(3)

    Excited-State Dynamics in Colloidal Semiconductor Nanocrystals

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    Statistical Learning of Discrete States in Time Series

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    Masia et al.

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    Cryogenic Single-Nanocrystal Spectroscopy: Reading the Spectral Fingerprint of Individual CdSe Quantum Dots

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    Spectroscopically resolved emission from single nanocrystals at cryogenic temperatures provides unique insight into physical processes that occur within these materials. At low temperatures, the emission spectra collapse to narrow lines, revealing a rich spectroscopic landscape and unexpected properties, completely hidden at the ensemble level. Since these techniques were first used, the technology of nanocrystal synthesis has matured significantly, and new materials with outstanding photostability have been reported. In this perspective, we show how cryogenic spectroscopy of single nanocrystals probes the fundamental excitonic structure of the band edge, revealing spectral fingerprints that are highly sensitive to a range of photophysical properties as well as nanocrystal morphology. In particular, spectral and temporal signatures of biexciton and trion emission are revealed, and their relevance to emerging technologies is discussed. Overall we show how cryogenic single nanocrystal spectroscopy can be used as a tool for understanding fundamental photophysics and guiding the synthesis of new nanocrystal materials
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