12 research outputs found
Optimising the Efficiency of a Quantum Memory based on Rephased Amplified Spontaneous Emission
We studied the recall efficiency as a function of optical depth of rephased
amplified spontaneous emission (RASE), a protocol for generating entangled
light. The experiments were performed on the
transition in the rare-earth doped crystal
Pr:YSiO, using a four-level echo sequence between four
hyperfine levels to rephase the emission. Rephased emission was observed for
optical depths in the range of = 0.8 to 2.0 with a maximum rephasing
efficiency of 14 % observed while incorporating spin storage. This efficiency
is a significant improvement over the previously reported non-classical result
but is well short of the predicted efficiency. We discuss the possible
mechanisms limiting the protocol's performance, and suggest ways to overcome
these limits.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Sub-megahertz homogeneous linewidth for Er in Si via in situ single photon detection
We studied the optical properties of a resonantly excited trivalent Er
ensemble in Si accessed via in situ single photon detection. A novel approach
which avoids nanofabrication on the sample is introduced, resulting in a highly
efficient detection of 70 excitation frequencies, of which 63 resonances have
not been observed in literature. The center frequencies and optical lifetimes
of all resonances have been extracted, showing that 5% of the resonances are
within 1 GHz of our electrically detected resonances and that the optical
lifetimes range from 0.5 ms up to 1.5 ms. We observed inhomogeneous broadening
of less than 400 MHz and an upper bound on the homogeneous linewidth of 1.4 MHz
and 0.75 MHz for two separate resonances, which is a reduction of more than an
order of magnitude observed to date. These narrow optical transition properties
show that Er in Si is an excellent candidate for future quantum information and
communication applications.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Millisecond electron spin coherence time for erbium ions in silicon
Spins in silicon that are accessible via a telecom-compatible optical
transition are a versatile platform for quantum information processing that can
leverage the well-established silicon nanofabrication industry. Key to these
applications are long coherence times on the optical and spin transitions to
provide a robust system for interfacing photonic and spin qubits. Here, we
report telecom-compatible Er3+ sites with long optical and electron spin
coherence times, measured within a nuclear spin-free silicon crystal (<0.01%
29Si) using optical detection. We investigate two sites and find 0.1 GHz
optical inhomogeneous linewidths and homogeneous linewidths below 70 kHz for
both sites. We measure the electron spin coherence time of both sites using
optically detected magnetic resonance and observe Hahn echo decay constants of
0.8 ms and 1.2 ms at around 11 mT. These optical and spin properties of Er3+:Si
are an important milestone towards using optically accessible spins in silicon
for a broad range of quantum information processing applications.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Optically addressable nuclear spins in a solid with a six-hour coherence time
Space-like separation of entangled quantum states is a central concept in fundamental investigations of quantum mechanics and in quantum communication applications. Optical approaches are ubiquitous in the distribution of entanglement because entangled photons are easy to generate and transmit. However, extending this direct distribution beyond a range of a few hundred kilometres to a worldwide network is prohibited by losses associated with scattering, diffraction and absorption during transmission. A proposal to overcome this range limitation is the quantum repeater protocol, which involves the distribution of entangled pairs of optical modes among many quantum memories stationed along the transmission channel. To be effective, the memories must store the quantum information encoded on the optical modes for times that are long compared to the direct optical transmission time of the channel. Here we measure a decoherence rate of 8 × 10(-5) per second over 100 milliseconds, which is the time required for light transmission on a global scale. The measurements were performed on a ground-state hyperfine transition of europium ion dopants in yttrium orthosilicate ((151)Eu(3+):Y2SiO5) using optically detected nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The observed decoherence rate is at least an order of magnitude lower than that of any other system suitable for an optical quantum memory. Furthermore, by employing dynamic decoupling, a coherence time of 370 ± 60 minutes was achieved at 2 kelvin. It has been almost universally assumed that light is the best long-distance carrier for quantum information. However, the coherence time observed here is long enough that nuclear spins travelling at 9 kilometres per hour in a crystal would have a lower decoherence with distance than light in an optical fibre. This enables some very early approaches to entanglement distribution to be revisited, in particular those in which the spins are transported rather than the light.This work was supported by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (CE110001027), and M.J.S. was supported by an Australian Research Council Future
Fellowship (FT110100919). J.J.L. was supported by the Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand (contract UOO1221)
Optical and Zeeman spectroscopy of individual Er ion pairs in silicon
We make the first study the optical energy level structure and interactions
of pairs of single rare earth ions using a hybrid electro-optical detection
method applied to Er-implanted silicon. Two examples of Er3+ pairs were
identified in the optical spectrum by their characteristic energy level
splitting patterns, and linear Zeeman spectra were used to characterise the
sites. One pair is positively identified as two identical Er3+ ions in sites of
at least C2 symmetry coupled via a large, 200 GHz Ising-like spin interaction
and 1.5 GHz resonant optical interaction. Small non-Ising contributions to the
spin interaction are attributed to distortion of the site measurable because of
the high resolution of the single-ion measurement. The interactions are
compared to previous measurements made using rare earth ensemble systems, and
the application of this type of strongly coupled ion array to quantum computing
is discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
The Zeeman and hyperfine interactions of a single ion in Si
Er-doped Si is a promising candidate for quantum information applications due
to its telecom wavelength optical transition and its compatibility with Si
nanofabrication technologies. Recent spectroscopic studies based on
photoluminescence excitation have shown multiple well-defined lattice sites
that Er occupies in Si. Here we report the first measurement of the Zeeman and
hyperfine tensors of a single 167Er3+ ion in Si. All the obtained tensors are
highly anisotropic with the largest value principal axes aligning in nearly the
same direction, and the trace of the lowest crystal field level g-tensor is
17.780.40. The results indicate that this specific Er site is likely to be
a distorted cubic site that exhibits monoclinic (C1) symmetry. Finally, zero
first-order-Zeeman (ZEFOZ) fields are identified for this site and could be
used to reduce decoherence of hyperfine spin states in future experiments