Artículos de revistas
Spectral-hole memory for light at the single-photon level
Fecha
2016-04Registro en:
Kutluer, Kutlu; Pascual Winter, María Florencia; Dajczgewand, Julian Eduardo; Ledingham, Patrick M.; Mazzera, Margherita; et al.; Spectral-hole memory for light at the single-photon level; American Physical Society; Physical Review A; 93; 4; 4-2016; 40302-40307
2469-9934
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Kutluer, Kutlu
Pascual Winter, María Florencia
Dajczgewand, Julian Eduardo
Ledingham, Patrick M.
Mazzera, Margherita
Chanelière, Thierry
De Riedmatten, Hugues
Resumen
We demonstrate a solid-state spin-wave optical memory based on stopped light in a spectral hole. A long-lived narrow spectral hole is created by optical pumping in the inhomogeneous absorption profile of a Pr3+:Y2SiO5 crystal. Optical pulses sent through the spectral hole experience a strong reduction of their group velocity and are spatially compressed in the crystal. A short Raman pulse transfers the optical excitation to the spin state before the light pulse exits the crystal, effectively stopping the light. After a controllable delay, a second Raman pulse is sent, which leads to the emission of the stored photons. We reach storage and retrieval efficiencies for bright pulses of up to 39% in a 5-mm-long crystal. We also show that our device works at the single-photon level by storing and retrieving 3-μs-long weak coherent pulses with efficiencies up to 31%, demonstrating the most efficient spin-wave solid-state optical memory at the single-photon level so far. We reach an unconditional noise level of (9±1)×10-3 photons per pulse in a detection window of 4μs, leading to a signal-to-noise ratio of 33±4 for an average input photon number of 1, making our device promising for long-lived storage of nonclassical light.