Optimal quantum control (OQC) enabled by femtosecond laser pulse shaping techniques provides a highly flexible approach to quantum states manipulation in solid-state qubit systems. Here we apply OQC to optimize the form of the triggering laser pulse for a single photon source. The use of a frequency-swept laser pulse possessing a notch resonant with the transition energy of the quantum emitter enables the spectral isolation of the emitted photon stream in conjunction with resonant driving for good indistinguishability. We show that the robustness of this scheme would enable spectral multiplexing of quantum light sources using a single triggering laser pulse.
In this presentation I will describe a new laser driving scheme for triggered high-brightness single photon emitters using a chirped laser pulse possessing a spectral hole resonant with the transition energy of the emitter, referred to as Notch-filtered adiabatic rapid passage (NARP). When combined with optimized photonic structures for enhanced collection efficiency and commercial filters we estimate that NARP would provide less than 10-8 scattered photons per emitted photon with a 4% detection loss together with resonant driving for high photon indistinguishability. We demonstrate inversion using NARP experimentally in a single semiconductor QD.
Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) may be applied to solid-state quantum emitters of interest for quantum light sources or nodes in distributed quantum networks. For such emitters, resonant optical driving results in the highest degree of photon indistinguishability, but leads to the need to reject scattered light from the laser used to drive the emitter. In this work, we apply femtosecond pulse shaping techniques to the development of quantum state inversion strategies for QD emitters that optimize fidelity and source brightness. The control protocols we have developed would be applicable to a wide range of solid-state QE systems.
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