685 research outputs found
Dipole induced transparency in drop-filter cavity-waveguide systems
We show that a waveguide that is normally opaque due to interaction with a
drop-filter cavity can be made transparent when the drop filter is also coupled
to a dipole. A transparency condition is derived between the cavity lifetime
and vacuum Rabi frequency of the dipole. This condition is much weaker than
strong coupling, and amounts to simply achieving large Purcell factors. Thus,
we can observe transparency in the weak coupling regime. We describe how this
effect can be useful for designing quantum repeaters for long distance quantum
communication
Dispersive properties and giant Kerr non-linearities in Dipole Induced Transparency
We calculate the dispersive properties of the reflected field from a cavity
coupled to a single dipole. We show that when a field is resonant with the
dipole it experiences a 90 degree phase shift relative to reflection from a
bare cavity if the Purcell factor exceeds the bare cavity reflectivity. We then
show that optically Stark shifting the dipole with a second field can be used
to achieve giant Kerr non-linearites. It is shown that currently achievable
cavity lifetimes and cavity quality factors can allow a single emitter in the
cavity to impose a nonlinear phase shift at the single photon level
Deterministic coupling of a single nitrogen vacancy center to a photonic crystal cavity
We describe and experimentally demonstrate a technique for deterministic
coupling between a photonic crystal (PC) nanocavity and single emitters. The
technique is based on in-situ scanning of a PC cavity over a sample and allows
the positioning of the cavity over a desired emitter with nanoscale resolution.
The power of the technique, which we term a Scanning Cavity Microscope (SCM),
is demonstrated by coupling the PC nanocavity to a single nitrogen vacancy (NV)
center in diamond, an emitter system that provides optically accessible
electron and nuclear spin qubits
Photonic Crystal Cavities and Waveguides
Recently, it has also become possible to microfabricate high reflectivity mirrors by creating two- and three-dimensional periodic structures. These periodic "photonic crystals" can be designed to open up frequency bands within which the propagation of electromagnetic waves is forbidden irrespective of the propagation direction in space and define photonic bandgaps. When combined with high index contrast slabs in which light can be efficiently guided, microfabricated two-dimensional photonic bandgap mirrors provide us with the geometries needed to confine and concentrate light into extremely small volumes and to obtain very high field intensities. Here we show the use of these "artificially" microfabricated crystals in functional nonlinear optical devices, such as lasers, modulators, and waveguides
Coherent Optical Spectroscopy of a Single Quantum Dot Via an Off-Resonant Cavity
In recent experiments on coupled quantum dot (QD) optical cavity systems a
pronounced interaction between the dot and the cavity has been observed even
for detunings of many cavity linewidths. This interaction has been attributed
to an incoherent phonon-mediated scattering process and is absent in atomic
systems. Here, we demonstrate that despite its incoherent nature, this process
preserves the signatures of coherent interaction between a QD and a strong
driving laser, which may be observed via the optical emission from the
off-resonant cavity. Under bichromatic driving of the QD, the cavity emission
exhibits spectral features consistent with optical dressing of the QD
transition. In addition to revealing new aspects of the off-resonant QD-cavity
interaction, this result provides a new, simpler means of coherently probing
QDs than traditional approaches and opens the possibility of employing
off-resonant cavities to optically interface QD-nodes in quantum networks.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Ultrafast coherent manipulation of trions in site-controlled nanowire quantum dots
Physical implementations of large-scale quantum processors based on solid-state platforms benefit from realizations of quantum bits positioned in regular arrays. Self-assembled quantum dots are well established as promising candidates for quantum optics and quantum information processing, but they are randomly positioned. Site-controlled quantum dots, on the other hand, are grown in pre-defined locations but have not yet been sufficiently developed to be used as a platform for quantum information processing. In this paper, we demonstrate all-optical ultrafast complete coherent control of a qubit formed by the single-spin/trion states of a charged site-controlled nanowire quantum dot. Our results show that site-controlled quantum dots in nanowires are promising hosts of charged-exciton qubits and that these qubits can be cleanly manipulated in the same fashion as has been demonstrated in randomly positioned quantum dot samples. Our findings suggest that many of the related excitonic qubit experiments that have been performed over the past 15 years may work well in the more scalable, site-controlled systems, making them very promising for the realization of quantum hardware
Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics: Coherent Coupling of a Single Photon to a Cooper Pair Box
Under appropriate conditions, superconducting electronic circuits behave
quantum mechanically, with properties that can be designed and controlled at
will. We have realized an experiment in which a superconducting two-level
system, playing the role of an artificial atom, is strongly coupled to a single
photon stored in an on-chip cavity. We show that the atom-photon coupling in
this circuit can be made strong enough for coherent effects to dominate over
dissipation, even in a solid state environment. This new regime of matter light
interaction in a circuit can be exploited for quantum information processing
and quantum communication. It may also lead to new approaches for single photon
generation and detection.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Nature, embargo does
apply, version with high resolution figures available at:
http://www.eng.yale.edu/rslab/Andreas/content/science/PubsPapers.htm
Observations of the pulsating subdwarf B star Feige 48: Constraints on evolution and companions
Since pulsating subdwarf B (sdBV or EC14026) stars were first discovered
(Kilkenny et al, 1997), observational efforts have tried to realize their
potential for constraining the interior physics of extreme horizontal branch
(EHB) stars. Difficulties encountered along the way include uncertain mode
identifications and a lack of stable pulsation mode properties. Here we report
on Feige 48, an sdBV star for which follow-up observations have been obtained
spanning more than four years, which shows some stable pulsation modes.
We resolve the temporal spectrum into five stable pulsation periods in the
range 340 to 380 seconds with amplitudes less than 1%, and two additional
periods that appear in one dataset each. The three largest amplitude
periodicities are nearly equally spaced, and we explore the consequences of
identifying them as a rotationally split l=1 triplet by consulting with a
representative stellar model.
The general stability of the pulsation amplitudes and phases allows us to use
the pulsation phases to constrain the timescale of evolution for this sdBV
star. Additionally, we are able to place interesting limits on any stellar or
planetary companion to Feige 48.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Genome-wide association analysis on normal hearing function identifies PCDH20 and SLC28A3 as candidates for hearing function and loss
Hearing loss and individual differences in normal hearing both have a substantial genetic basis. Although many new genes contributing to deafness have been identified, very little is known about genes/variants modulating the normal range of hearing ability. To fill this gap, we performed a two-stage meta-analysis on hearing thresholds (tested at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8 kHz) and on pure-tone averages (low-, medium- and high-frequency thresholds grouped) in several isolated populations from Italy and Central Asia (total N = 2636). Here, we detected two genome-wide significant loci close to PCDH20 and SLC28A3 (top hits: rs78043697, P = 4.71E-10 and rs7032430, P = 2.39E-09, respectively). For both loci, we sought replication in two independent cohorts: B58C from the UK (N = 5892) and FITSA from Finland (N = 270). Both loci were successfully replicated at a nominal level of significance (P < 0.05). In order to confirm our quantitative findings, we carried out RT-PCR and reported RNA-Seq data, which showed that both genes are expressed in mouse inner ear, especially in hair cells, further suggesting them as good candidates for modulatory genes in the auditory system. Sequencing data revealed no functional variants in the coding region of PCDH20 or SLC28A3, suggesting that variation in regulatory sequences may affect expression. Overall, these results contribute to a better understanding of the complex mechanisms underlying human hearing function
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