Demonstration of Atomic Frequency Comb Memory for Light with Spin-Wave Storage
Source: Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 040503 (2010); doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.040503
Published 27 January 2010
We present a light-storage experiment in a praseodymium-doped crystal where the light is mapped onto an inhomogeneously broadened optical transition shaped into an atomic frequency comb. After absorption of the light, the optical excitation is converted into a spin-wave excitation by a control pulse. A second control pulse reads the memory (on-demand) by reconverting the spin-wave excitation to an optical one, where the comb structure causes a photon-echo-type rephasing of the dipole moments and directional retrieval of the light. This combination of photon-echo and spin-wave storage allows us to store submicrosecond (450 ns) pulses for up to 20 µs. The scheme has a high potential for storing multiple temporal modes in the single-photon regime, which is an important resource for future long-distance quantum communication based on quantum repeaters.
©2010 The American Physical Society
| History: | Received 14 August 2009; published 27 January 2010 |
| Permalink: |
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v104/e040503 |
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