142 research outputs found
The nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond re-visited
Symmetry considerations are used in presenting a model of the electronic
structure and the associated dynamics of the nitrogen-vacancy center in
diamond. The model accounts for the occurrence of optically induced spin
polarization, for the change of emission level with spin polarization and for
new measurements of transient emission. The rate constants given are in
variance to those reported previously.Comment: 12 pages 10 figure
Chip-based microcavities coupled to NV centers in single crystal diamond
Optical coupling of nitrogen vacancy centers in single-crystal diamond to an
on-chip microcavity is demonstrated. The microcavity is fabricated from a
hybrid gallium phosphide and diamond material system, and supports whispering
gallery mode resonances with spectrometer resolution limited Q > 25000
Single photon quantum cryptography
We report the full implementation of a quantum cryptography protocol using a
stream of single photon pulses generated by a stable and efficient source
operating at room temperature. The single photon pulses are emitted on demand
by a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in a diamond nanocrystal. The
quantum bit error rate is less that 4.6% and the secure bit rate is 9500
bits/s. The overall performances of our system reaches a domain where single
photons have a measurable advantage over an equivalent system based on
attenuated light pulses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Production of heralded pure single photons from imperfect sources using cross phase modulation
Realistic single-photon sources do not generate single photons with
certainty. Instead they produce statistical mixtures of photons in Fock states
and vacuum (noise). We describe how to eliminate the noise in the
output of the sources by means of another noisy source or a coherent state and
cross phase modulation (XPM). We present a scheme which announces the
production of pure single photons and thus eliminates the vacuum contribution.
This is done by verifying a XPM related phase shift with a Mach-Zehnder
interferometer.Comment: 8 pages, 8 EPS figures, RevTeX4. Following changes have been made in
v.3: Title and abstract slightly changed; numerous minor revisions and
clarifications within the text; an appendix with three new figures has been
added. In version v4 we have included a supplementary analysis of our scheme
that takes into account absorption losses. Our analysis is heuristic and
based on a phenomenological model, which is independent of the physical
realization of the proposed scheme. We have estimated upper bounds up to
which absorption losses can be tolerated, so as our scheme to improve the
efficiency of single photon sources still works. Accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
On-demand single-photon state generation via nonlinear absorption
We propose a method for producing on-demand single-photon states based on
collision-induced exchanges of photons and unbalanced linear absorption between
two single-mode light fields. These two effects result in an effective
nonlinear absorption of photons in one of the modes, which can lead to single
photon states. A quantum nonlinear attenuator based on such a mechanism can
absorb photons in a normal input light pulse and terminate the absorption at a
single-photon state. Because the output light pulses containing single photons
preserve the properties of the input pulses, we expect this method to be a
means for building a highly controllable single photon source.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PRA. To be published in PR
Indistinguishable Photons from a Single Molecule
We report the results of coincidence counting experiments at the output of a
Michelson interferometer using the zero-phonon-line emission of a single
molecule at . Under continuous wave excitation, we observe the absence
of coincidence counts as an indication of two-photon interference. This
corresponds to the observation of Hong-Ou-Mandel correlations and proves the
suitability of the zero-phonon-line emission of single molecules for
applications in linear optics quantum computation.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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