Quantum memories, capable of storing single photons or other quantum states
of light, to be retrieved on-demand, offer a route to large-scale quantum
information processing with light. A promising class of memories is based on
far-off-resonant Raman absorption in ensembles of Λ-type atoms. However
at room temperature these systems exhibit unwanted four-wave mixing, which is
prohibitive for applications at the single-photon level. Here we show how this
noise can be suppressed by placing the storage medium inside a moderate-finesse
optical cavity, thereby removing the main roadblock hindering this approach to
quantum memory.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. This paper provides the theoretical background
to our recent experimental demonstration of noise suppression in a
cavity-enhanced Raman-type memory ( arXiv:1510.04625 ). See also the related
paper arXiv:1511.05448, which describes numerical modelling of an atom-filled
cavity. Comments welcom