A light-atom quantum interface based on electromagnetically induced transparency

Date
2007
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Abstract
Quantum information systems require an interface between photons as a physical system to transport information and atoms which are better suited to store and process it. In this thesis the construction of a novel pulsed, bright and narrow-band light source is presented. It consists of an optical parametric oscillator featuring a periodically poled KTP crystal and a mechanical chopper and produces ?s-pulses of squeezed vacuum. The generated states are resonant to the Rubidium-DI-transition, are almost transform-limited and show more than 3 dB of squeezing. The physical effect of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) in hot rubidium vapor can be used to generate ultra-low group velocities and allows for a reversible adiabatic conversion of optical quantum states into collective spin excitations which can be used to stop pulses of light. I report about recent progress in slowing down a pulse of squeezed vacuum by one third of its width while still preserving 0.36 dB of squeezing in the process. I analyze electromagnetically induced transparency and light storage in an ensemble of atoms with multiple excited levels (multi-A configuration) which are coupled to one of the ground states by quantized signal fields and to the other one via classical control fields. A basis transformation of atomic and optical states which reduces the analysis of the system to that of electromagnetically induced transparency in a regular three-level configuration is presented. We demonstrate the existence of dark state polaritons and propose a protocol to transfer quantum information from one optical mode to another by adiabatic control of the control fields and present a proof-of principle experiment to adiabatically transfer light between modes of different frequencies in Rb-87 vapor. To that end a digital phase lock circuit has been designed that allows to electronically phase lock an external-cavity diode laser to a reference laser over a 7 GHz frequency range with sub-Hertz precision.
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Bibliography: p. 154-166
Some pages are in colour.
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Appel, J. (2007). A light-atom quantum interface based on electromagnetically induced transparency (Doctoral thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/1322
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