For over a decade the field of quantum photonics has increasingly looked towards optical integrated platforms to perform more complex and sophisticated experiments. Silica integrated optics is an ideal material for this area, offering low propagation and fibre-coupling losses. To date many of the key on-chip experiments have been carried out in this platform, using bespoke monolithic devices. In this work we propose an alternative approach, implementing a linear network constructed from a number of identical reconfigurable modules. The modules are measured separately to produce an accurate model of the overall network. The cellular nature also allows the replacement of modules that are faulty or substandard. Each module comprises of an array of 10 Mach-Zhender interferometers. Forty thermo-optic phase shifters on each chip allows the control of both the amplitude and phase of the optical field within the devices. By cascading the modules any arbitrary NxN unitary network can be realised. The optical waveguides within the modules are fabricated by direct UV writing, where a scanning focused UV laser beam increases the local refractive index within a photosensitive germanosilicate glass layer. The resulting channel waveguides are engineered to have dimensions that are mode matched to standard optical fibre producing excellent coupling efficiency. Bragg gratings can also be simultaneously produced within the waveguides which greatly assists in the precise characterisation of the phase shifters, coupling ratios and optical losses within the modules. We will present our recent work in this area, demonstrating devices operating at telecom wavelengths for quantum information processing. We present a modular reconfigurable system for on-chip quantum optics experiments with excellent fibre compatibility and low propagation losses, implemented using direct-UV-written silica-on-silicon. The performance of fabricated devices in various configurations is reported.
We present results from the development of a fiber-coupled Acousto-Optic modulator (Fiber-Q®) operating at near-UV and blue wavelengths.
A conventional TeO2 based Bragg diffraction design is introduced for short wavelengths optical input. Pure silica core single mode fibers (both Polarisation Maintaining (PM) and non-PM) are used as coupling fibers for their transmission at these wavelengths, and to avoid the possibility of photo darkening. The end of the fibers are fused with silica end-caps, lowering the power density on their fiber-air interfaces to achieve a higher power handling. The Fiber-Q® can be optimized for multiple wavelengths (including 397nm or 422nm) and can accept power levels of up to 100mW. A hermetically sealed package is selected to provide a clean in-package environment thus protecting the optics from damage caused by external contamination.
In this presentation we report details of the design, and test results of a fiber-coupled Acousto-Optic modulator that demonstrates the performance required for use in ion-trap quantum information processing applications.
Single photons are a vital resource for optical quantum information processing. Efficient and deterministic single photon sources do not yet exist, however. To date, experimental demonstrations of quantum processing primitives have been implemented using non-deterministic sources combined with heralding and/or postselection. Unfortunately, even for eight photons, the data rates are already so low as to make most experiments impracticable. It is well known that quantum memories, capable of storing photons until they are needed, are a potential solution to this `scaling catastrophe'. Here, we analyze in detail the benefits of quantum memories for producing multiphoton states, showing how the production rates can be enhanced by many orders of magnitude. We identify the quantity $eta B$ as the most important figure of merit in this connection, where $eta$ and $B$ are the efficiency and time-bandwidth product of the memories, respectively. We go on to review our progress in implementing the most broadband memory to date, with $B<1000$, in room-temperature cesium vapour. We consider the noise properties for single photon storage and the integration of the memory using waveguides.
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