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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

PACS
  • 03.67.Hk
    Quantum communication
  • 42.50.Gy
    Effects of atomic coherence on propagation, absorption, and amplification of light
  • 42.50.Md
    Optical transient phenomena
  • YEAR: 2010
PUBLICATION DATA
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef APS
Mikael Afzelius,1 Imam Usmani,1 Atia Amari,2 Björn Lauritzen,1 Andreas Walther,2 Christoph Simon,1 Nicolas Sangouard,1 Jiří Minář,1 Hugues de Riedmatten,1 Nicolas Gisin,1 and Stefan Kröll2
1Group of Applied Physics, University of Geneva, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
2Department of Physics, Lund University, Box 118, SE-22100 Lund, Sweden

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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