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Nanophotonic Devices for Quantum Optics Feb 13, 2013 GCOE symposium Takao Aoki Waseda University

Nanophotonic Devices for Quantum Optics

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Feb 13, 2013 GCOE symposium. Nanophotonic Devices for Quantum Optics. Takao Aoki. Waseda University. Atom-Light Interaction. Interaction between a single two-level atom and single-mode near-resonant monochromatic light:. Strong optical nonlinearity at the single-photon level . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Nanophotonic Devices for Quantum Optics

Feb 13, 2013GCOE symposium

Takao Aoki

Waseda University

Page 2: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Atom-Light InteractionInteraction between a single two-level atom and single-mode near-resonant monochromatic light:

Strong optical nonlinearity at the single-photon level. Generation of non-classical light states. Quantum manipulation of atom/light states.

Page 3: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Atom-Light InteractionInteraction between a single two-level atom and single-mode near-resonant monochromatic light:

It had been extremely difficult to “isolate” individual atoms and single-mode light from the environment.

Page 4: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Interaction of Light and a Single Atom in Free Space

Resonant scattering cross section in the weak-driving limit

To control only the atom:

Just use strong enough light.

Page 5: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Interaction of Light and a Single Atom in Free Space

Resonant scattering cross section in the weak-driving limit:

To control both the atom and light:- Confine light in a small

volume- Tightly focus the light

beam down to .

Page 6: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Interaction of Light and a Single Atom in Free Space

Resonant scattering cross section in the weak-driving limit:

To control both the atom and light:- Confine light in a small

volume- Tightly focus the light

beam down to .

Page 8: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Technical Difficulties

In both cases, just detecting a single emitter had been a challenging task.

Single (laser-cooled) atom in vacuum:hard to trap within a volume ~ l3

Single solid-state emitters (molecule, quantum dot, …):

suffer from dephasing due to interaction with phonons

Page 9: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Experimental Progress

“Collisional Blockade”

No Blockade (Poisson Law)

Collisional Blockade

Page 10: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Experimental ProgressNature 411, 1024 (2001)

Page 11: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Measurement of light-extinction by a single atom

Nature Physics 4, 924 (2008)

Light extinction (coupling between one atom and a single-mode light beam)

Page 12: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Single Photon SourceScience 309, 454 (2005)

Single-atom Rabi oscillation

Page 13: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Single Photon SourceNature 440, 779 (2006)

Imperfect interference due to mode mismatching

Page 14: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Remaining Problems

High collection efficiency of single photons into a single-mode fiber is demanded.

Collection efficiency into a single-mode fiber < 1%

Collection into lens aperture

Transmission through various optics

Coupling into single-mode fiber

~10% ~50% ~10%

Page 15: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Optical NanofiberPull in both direction

Commercial single-mode fiber Microtorch or heater

rmin < l

r0 = 62.5 mmr(z)

z

Field

Inte

nsity

F. Warken et al., Opt. Express 15, 11952 (2007)

Page 16: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Optical Nanofiber

Excitation

Collection Efficiency =

Page 17: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Atom-Nanofiber Interface

Page 18: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Achievements at Kyoto

rmin ~ 200 nm

r0 = 62.5 mmr(z)

z

Adiabatic condition:

(longer taper has lower coupling to higher-order modes, thus shows higher transmission)

With tapering length of ~4 cm, we have fabricated tapered fibers with transmission > 99%, which is the highest value ever achieved to date.

single-mode fiber(silica core, silica clad)

tapered region: multi-mode waveguide

single-mode waveguide(silica core, vacuum clad)

T. Aoki, JJAP 49, 118001 (2010)

Page 19: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Our Idea: “Lensed” Nanofiber

Nanofiber with a spherical tip = “Lensed” nanofiber

Page 20: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Preliminary Study at Kyoto (Numerical Simulations)

10l 5l 2l-10l -5l -2l

Page 21: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Preliminary Study at Kyoto (Fabrication)

Acknowledgement: I would like to thank Mr. M. Kawaguchi (currently at Dept. of Chem.) for his assistance in the early stage of this work.

1.4

1.3

1.2

1.1

1.0FWH

M /

Wav

elen

gth

1.20.80.40.0

Z / Wavelength

Page 22: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Interaction of Light and a Single Atom in Free Space

Resonant scattering cross section in the weak-driving limit:

To control both the atom and light:- Confine light in a small

volume- Tightly focus the light

beam down to .

Page 23: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Interaction of Light and a Single Atom in Free Space

Resonant scattering cross section in the weak-driving limit:

To control both the atom and light:- Confine light in a small

volume- Tightly focus the light

beam down to .

Page 24: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Enhancement of Spontaneous Emission

• Atom-Light Interaction

• Dissipation of Atom   g • Dissipation of Light   k

g2

G = gk2

Purcell effect

• cavity mode

Decay rates for• free space

Enhancement of spontaneous emission if G > g .

Page 25: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Silica microtoroidal cavities

Monolithically fabricated on a Si chip

High coupling efficiency to optical fibers (~ 99.9% )

10 ~ 100 mm

High Q factor ( 107 ~ 1010 )

D. K. Armani et al., Nature 421, 925-929 (2003).

Page 26: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Placing an atom in the evanescent field

Cesiumatom

S. M. Spillane et al., PRA 71, 013817 (2005).

Page 27: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Realization of strongly-coupled toroidal cQED system

Nature 443, 671 (2006)

Page 28: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Realization of strongly-coupled toroidal cQED system

Nature Physics 7, 159 (2011)

Page 29: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

One-dimensional systemScience 319, 1062 (2008)

Page 30: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

One-dimensional system

in

atom

photons out

out

“Routing of Single Photons”

PRL 102, 083601 (2009)

Page 31: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Achievements at Kyoto

Photolithography & etching CO2 laser irradiation

Si substrate SiO2 disk

We have achieved cavity Q factor as high as 3x108.

T. Aoki, JJAP 49, 118001 (2010)

Page 32: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Single Atom Trap in the Toroid’s Mode

Cesiumatom

S. M. Spillane et al., PRA 71, 013817 (2005).

Page 33: Nanophotonic  Devices for Quantum Optics

Summary• We have proposed novel nanophotonic devices

for quantum optics.

• Numerical simulations show that a lensed nanofiber has focusing capability and ~30% collection efficiency, and a cleaved nanofiber has ~40% collection efficiency.

• We have successfully fabricated lensed nanofibers and cleaved nanofibers.

• We have fabricated ultra-high-Q microspherical resonators on a Si chip, which is more suitable for cQED experiments than microtoroidal resonators in terms of mode identification.