We report an optical memory in a rare earth doped crystal with long storage
times, up to 20 ms, together with an optical bandwidth of 1.5 MHz. This is
obtained by transferring optical coherences to nuclear spin coherences, which
were then protected against environmental noise by dynamical decoupling. With
this approach, we achieved a 33 fold increase in spin wave storage time over
the intrinsic spin coherence lifetime. Comparison between different decoupling
sequences indicates that sequences insensitive to initial spin coherence
increase retrieval efficiency. Finally, an interference experiment shows that
relative phases of input pulses are preserved through the whole storage process
with a visibility close to 1, demonstrating the usefulness of dynamical
decoupling for extending the storage time of quantum memories.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure