| Literature DB >> 26492951 |
A Javadi1, I Söllner1, M Arcari1, S Lindskov Hansen1, L Midolo1, S Mahmoodian1, G Kiršanskė1, T Pregnolato1, E H Lee2, J D Song2, S Stobbe1, P Lodahl1.
Abstract
Strong non-linear interactions between photons enable logic operations for both classical and quantum-information technology. Unfortunately, non-linear interactions are usually feeble and therefore all-optical logic gates tend to be inefficient. A quantum emitter deterministically coupled to a propagating mode fundamentally changes the situation, since each photon inevitably interacts with the emitter, and highly correlated many-photon states may be created. Here we show that a single quantum dot in a photonic-crystal waveguide can be used as a giant non-linearity sensitive at the single-photon level. The non-linear response is revealed from the intensity and quantum statistics of the scattered photons, and contains contributions from an entangled photon-photon bound state. The quantum non-linearity will find immediate applications for deterministic Bell-state measurements and single-photon transistors and paves the way to scalable waveguide-based photonic quantum-computing architectures.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26492951 PMCID: PMC4639909 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms9655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Resonant spectroscopy on a quantum dot in a photonic-crystal waveguide.
(a) Operational principle of resonant scattering in a photonic-crystal waveguide. Single-photon components of the incoming light are reflected by the quantum dot while two- and more-photon components are preferentially transmitted. (b) Illustration and (c) scanning electron micrograph of the sample. A quantum dot (white circle) in the central part of the slow-light section is excited by launching light through one grating and detecting light from the other grating. The red areas indicate the size of the excitation and collection areas. The green area is the illumination region of the repump laser, see Supplementarty Information. (d) Autocorrelation function of the photons emitted from the target quantum dot. The central peak is highly suppressed, which proves the single-photon character of the system. The area under the suppressed peak is about 30% of the adjacent peaks. (e) Resonant transmission spectrum recorded by scanning a narrow-band continuous-wave laser through the resonance of a quantum dot in the case of weak excitation. The power on the sample was 50 pW, which is far below the critical power of 1.9 nW. The solid black line is a model of the experimental data of the Fano resonance, see Supplementarty Information for details of the model.
Figure 2Non-linear response of a single quantum dot in a photonic-crystal waveguide.
Examples of transmission spectra recorded at two different powers of (a) P=0.18 nW and (b) P=2.2 nW. (c) Transmission on resonance with the quantum dot versus incident photon flux relative to the emitter lifetime. The top axis shows the corresponding optical power applied to the sample. The solid line is a fit to the experimental data. The critical power that characterizes the saturation curve is indicated on the axis. The insets show the measurement geometry and illustrate that for weak excitation the quantum dot preferentially reflects while it becomes transparent at stronger excitation where two- and higher-photon components of the coherent state dominate. (d) Same as (c) but after deconvolution of the spectral diffusion and blinking.
Figure 3Photon statistics induced by the single-photon non-linearity.
(a,b) Measurements of the autocorrelation function of the transmitted light recorded on resonance with the quantum dot for the conditions corresponding to Fig. 2a,b, respectively. (c) Power dependence of the autocorrelation function peak at =0. The solid black line is a fit to the data. A maximum bunching of 8% is observed, which corresponds to 18% when accounting for the finite response time of the detection. The vertical line indicates the critical power. (d) Same as (c) but after deconvolution of the spectral diffusion and blinking.