We present recent results aiming to construct single photon sources, detectors and gates using the integration of hot Rubidium atoms and microring resonators (MRRs). We demonstrate strong coupling between an ensemble of ≈53 atoms interacting with a high-Q (>4x10^5) cavity mode, with a many-atom coupling strength g/2pi≈1 GHz and cooperativity C≈3.6 achieved. A peak single-atom cooperativity C0≈0.4 is inferred; to achieve higher cooperativity, we have developed defect mode photonic crystal ring resonators with a 10x reduction in mode volume compared to the MRR while maintaining Q>10^5. Finally, we will discuss theoretical results that support single photon operations using these devices.
This Conference Presentation, “Slow-light and mode localization in high quality factor photonic crystal microring resonator,” was recorded at SPIE Photonics West 2022 held in San Francisco, California, United States.
Photon pair sources are fundamental building blocks for quantum entanglement and quantum communication. Recent studies in silicon photonics have documented promising characteristics for photon pair sources within the telecommunications band, including sub-milliwatt optical pump power, high spectral brightness, and high photon purity. However, most quantum systems suitable for local operation (e.g., storage/computation) support optical transitions in the visible or short nearinfrared bands. In comparison to telecommunications wavelengths, the significantly higher optical attenuation in silica at such wavelengths limits the length scale over which optical-fiber-based quantum communication between such local nodes can take place. One approach to connect such systems over fiber is through a photon pair source that can bridge the visible and telecom bands, but an appropriate source, which should produce narrow-band photon pairs with a high signal-to-noise ratio, has not yet been developed in an integrated platform. Here, we demonstrate a nanophotonic visible-telecom photon pair source for the first time, using high quality factor silicon nitride resonators to generate narrow-band photon pairs with unprecedented purity and brightness, with coincidence-toaccidental ratio (CAR) up to 3,780 ± 140 and detected photon-pair flux up to (18,400 ± 1,000) pairs/s. We further demonstrate visible-telecom time-energy entanglement and its distribution over a 20 km fiber, far exceeding the fiber length over which purely visible wavelength quantum light sources can be transmitted. Finally, we show how dispersion engineering of the microresonators enables the connections of different species of trapped atoms/ions, defect centers, and quantum dots to the telecommunications bands for future quantum communication systems.
Integrated quantum photonics relies critically on photon sources that have great purity, single-mode property, scalability, integrability and flexibility for both integrated quantum computing and long-haul quantum communication. Here we report a photon-pair/single-photon source that utilizes cavity-enhanced four-wave mixing in a high-Q silicon microresonator. The photon-pair source has a spectral brightness of 6:25 × 108 pairs/s/mW2/GHz and a quantum cross-correlation of g(2)si (0) = (2:58 ± 0:16) × 104. The generated photons are single-mode, with a quantum self-correlation of 1:87 ± 0:05. The heralded single photons has conditional photon autocorrelation gc(2) as low as 0:0075 ± 0:0017 at 5:9 × 104 pair/s.
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