Researchers Take Key Step Toward Quantum Memory
Storage and retrieval of single photon demonstrates rudimentary quantum network
Atlanta (December 7, 2005) — A series of publications in the journal Nature highlights the race among competing research groups toward the long-anticipated goal of quantum networking.
In one of three papers published the journal’s December 8 issue, a group of physicists from the Georgia Institute of Technology led by Professors Alex Kuzmich and Brian Kennedy describe the storage and retrieval of single photons transmitted between remote quantum memories composed of rubidium atoms. The work represents a significant step toward quantum communication and computation networks that would store and process information using both photons and atoms.
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| Georgia Tech researchers pose with equipment used to demonstrate storage of a single photon in a quantum memory. Shown are Alex Kuzmich, Thierry Chaneliere, Brian Kennedy, Stewart Jenkins, Shau-Yu Lan and Dzmitry Matsukevich |
But the researchers caution that even with their rudimentary network operation, practical applications for quantum networking remain a long way off.
“The controlled transfer of single quanta between remote quantum memories is an important step toward distributed quantum networks,” said Alex Kuzmich, the Cullen-Peck Assistant Professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Physics. “But this is still a building block. It will take a lot of steps and several more years for this to happen in a practical way.”
Slightly more than a year ago in a paper published in the
journal Science, Kuzmich and collaborator Dzmitry
Matsukevich described transferring atomic state information from
two different clouds of rubidium atoms onto a single photon.
That work was the first time that quantum information had been
transferred from matter to light.
In the new paper in Nature, Kuzmich, Kennedy and
collaborators Thierry Chaneliere, Dzmitry Matsukevich, Stewart
Jenkins, Shau-Yu Lan carry the earlier operation one step
farther by storing and retrieving single photons from clouds of
ultra-cold rubidium atoms – demonstrating the storage of
light-based information in matter.
From an applications perspective, the storage and retrieval of a
qubit state in an atomic quantum memory node is an important
step towards a “quantum repeater.” Such a device would be
necessary for transmitting quantum information long distances
through optical fibers.
Existing telecommunications networks use classical light to
transmit information through optical fibers. To carry
information long distances, such signals must be periodically
boosted by repeater stations that cannot be used for quantum
networking.
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| Researchers Thierry Chaneliere and Dzmitry Matsukevich pose with equipment used to demonstrate storage of a single photon in a quantum memory. |
The Georgia Tech researchers began their experiment by
exciting a cloud of rubidium atoms stored in a magneto-optical
trap at temperatures approaching absolute zero. The excitation
can generate a photon – but only infrequently, perhaps once
every five seconds. Because it is in resonance with the atoms
from which it was created, the photon carries specific quantum
information about the excitation state of the atoms.
The photon was sent down approximately 100 meters of optical
fiber to a second very cold cloud of trapped rubidium atoms. The
researchers controlled the velocity of the photon in the second
cloud by an intense control laser beam. Once the photon was
inside the cloud, the control beam was switched off, allowing
the photon to come to a halt inside the dense ensemble of atoms.
“The information from the photon is stored in the state of
excitation of many atoms of the second ensemble,” explained
Jenkins, a graduate student who specializes in quantum optics
theory. “Each atom in the ensemble is slightly flipped, so the
atomic ensemble is sharing this information – which is really
information about spin.”
After allowing the photon to be stored in the atomic cloud for
time periods that exceeded 10 microseconds, the control beam was
turned back on, allowing the photon to re-emerge from the atomic
cloud. The researchers then compared the quantum information
carried on the photon to verify that it matched the information
carried into the cloud.
“When the single photon is generated, the first atomic ensemble
is in an excited state,” explained Chaneliere, a postdoctoral
fellow in the Kuzmich lab. “When we read the information from
the second ensemble and find a coincidence between its
excitation and the excitation of the first ensemble, we have
demonstrated storage of the photon.”
To confirm the single photon character of the storage, the
researchers used anti-correlation measurements involving three
single photon detectors.
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| Schematic shows the experimental set-up in which two
quantum memories were connected by optical fiber. |
Storage of the photon for even a brief period of time within
the atomic ensemble depends on careful control of
potentially-interfering magnetic fields. And it works only
because the rubidium atoms are so cold that their motion is
limited.
“Quantum information is very fragile,” said Chaneliere. “If you
have a magnetic field, the atoms spin out of phase, and you can
lose the information. For the moment, that is certainly a
limitation on the use of this for quantum networking.”
For the future, the team hopes to add additional nodes to their
rudimentary quantum network and encode useful information onto
their photons.
They must also increase the probability of creating single
photons from the first atomic cloud. While gathering data, the
researchers excited the first cloud of atoms approximately 200
times a second. A single photon was created about once every
five seconds, reported Matsukevich, a graduate student in the
Kuzmich lab.
Highlighting the speed at which progress is being made toward
quantum networking, Kuzmich, Kennedy and their team have more
recently demonstrated entanglement between two atomic qubits
separated by a distance of 5.5 meters. The work is described in
a paper submitted to the journal Physical Review Letters.
“This entanglement would be important to a number of
applications, including quantum cryptography,” said Kuzmich. “We
have generated entanglement of atomic qubits. We also showed
that we can take this entanglement and map it from atoms to
photons.”
Research by Kuzmich, Kennedy and their colleagues has been
supported by NASA, the Office of Naval Research Young
Investigator Program, National Science Foundation, Research
Corporation, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and Cullen-Peck Chair.
Research News & Publications Office
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 USA
Media Relations Contact: John Toon
(404-894-6986); E-mail: (john.toon@edi.gatech.edu).
Technical Contacts: Alex Kuzmich
(404-385-4507); E-mail: (alex.kuzmich@physics.gatech.edu) or
Brian Kennedy (404-894-5221) ; (brian.kennedy@physics.gatech.edu).
Writer: John Toon
(Source: Tech News Release)











