Abstract
Emission and absorption of single photons by single atoms is a fundamental limit of matter–light interaction, manifesting its quantum mechanical nature. As a controlled process, it is also a key tool in quantum optical information technology 1,2,3. Controlled single-photon emission is well advanced 4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14; for controlled single-photon absorption by a single atom, proposals exist but only preliminary experimental steps have been taken 15,16,17,18,19. Here we report the absorption of single photons by a single trapped ion: employing a photon pair source, detection of the quantum-correlated partner photon heralds the presence of the resonant photon at the atom. We find clear correlations between the detection of the herald and the absorption process in the atom; we also demonstrate polarization control of this process. Our experiment evidences previously unexplored interaction between a single absorber and a quantum light source; with improved control over the coupling, it will open up new avenues in quantum technology.
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Single trapped atomic ions provide optimal conditions for quantum information processing, meeting the requirements of high-fidelity state manipulation and detection schemes, as well as controlled interaction of the quantum bits 20,21,22. At the same time, single photons are ideal carriers for transmitting quantum states and distributing entanglement over long distances23. Establishing quantum correlations between single atoms and single photons allows one to carry out non-local atomic quantum gates mediated by photonic degrees of freedom, a key ingredient in quantum networks1,3,24,25; this was demonstrated recently in experiments that created and employed entanglement between two remotely trapped ions26,27,28. These operations are based on the underlying entanglement between a single atom and its emitted photons 12,13,14. A fully bidirectional atom/photon interface implies transfer of quantum correlations also in the absorption of a photon; then entanglement can be distributed in a network by making two distant atoms interact with an entangled photon pair29,30. Control over single-photon absorption by means of strong focusing is being addressed in several experiments 15,16,17,18,19. We realized a different approach, the interaction between a single trapped ion and resonant heralded single photons from an entangled-photon source based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC). We show that the time correlation shared by SPDC photon pairs is preserved in the interaction process, that is, that absorption of a single photon by the ion is marked by the coincident detection of the second photon from the pair. In addition, polarization control of the absorption process is demonstrated after suitable preparation of the ion in Zeeman sub-levels, which is important for future incorporation of our approach in quantum communication schemes. More generally we demonstrate the interaction in a hybrid quantum system involving atoms and quantum light at the most fundamental limit of individual quantum particles.
Figure 1 shows schematically our experimental set-up. It combines a single trapped atomic ion with a continuous-wave source of entangled photon pairs. The 40Ca+ ion is confined and laser-cooled in a linear Paul trap that is placed between two high-numerical-aperture laser objectives31 (HALOs) collecting the ion’s laser-excited fluorescence. The photon source emits coincident, frequency-correlated photon pairs with orthogonal polarizations in a 200 GHz spectral band centred at the frequency of the D5/2−P3/2 electronic transition of 40Ca+, at 854 nm wavelength. For our experiments, the source is designed to interact resonantly with the 40Ca+ ion 32,33,34: the photon pairs are split, and on one of them we impose a frequency filtering to select ‘trigger’ photons that match in frequency and bandwidth the D5/2–P3/2 transition. The second, unfiltered photon is coupled to the ion through an optical fibre and one of the HALOs. As the two coincident photons are frequency-correlated32, absorption events should be accompanied by the simultaneous detection of a trigger photon that has passed the filter. The degree of such correlation between the detection of trigger photons and the recording of absorption events is controlled by the detuning of the filtering cavities with respect to the atomic resonance, and by the polarization of the photons exciting the ion.
Figure 2a shows the excitation sequence used to control the photon–ion interaction. Each period starts with a time interval during which the motion of the ion is laser-cooled. Excitation parameters of this part, that is, intensities and detunings of the lasers and duration of the pulse, are optimized experimentally to ensure that the ion is well localized and Doppler effects are negligible. Thereafter, the internal state of the ion is prepared using an optical pumping pulse: circularly polarized laser light at 854 nm, propagating along the quantization axis and resonant with the D5/2−P3/2 electronic transition, pumps the ion into one of the two outer Zeeman sub-levels of the D5/2 manifold, where it remains without scattering further photons. The appropriate helicity of the pump beam allows us to prepare an incoherent superposition of the states either with magnetic quantum numbers , or with . Finally, in the detection phase of the sequence, the ion is exposed to the unfiltered, polarization-controlled SPDC photons, while the photodetectors are activated (PMT and APD in Fig. 1).
Absorption events during the detection phase are signalled by the onset of fluorescence, following the transfer of the electronic population from the D5/2 to the P3/2 manifold and spontaneous decay towards the S1/2 level or the D3/2 level (with 93.5% and 0.7% probability, respectively35); this then leads to steady blue fluorescence induced by the laser excitation at 397 nm and 866 nm and recorded by the photomultiplier tube (PMT). Meanwhile, the filtered trigger photons are detected on the avalanche photodiode (APD). Figure 2b shows the signal of the two photodetectors to illustrate this process. For sufficiently high time resolution, as shown in Fig. 2c, we note that the arrival time of the first blue photon on the PMT coincides with the detection of a trigger photon on the APD. Hence, the time correlation initially shared by the photon pair has been transferred to the ion–photon system in this particular absorption event. To confirm this coincidence statistically, we compute the second-order time correlation function, g(2)(τ), between detection events on the two detectors. Figure 2d shows that it exhibits a large peak at zero time delay showing that absorption of a single SPDC photon by the ion is marked by the coincident detection of a trigger photon. In the data presented in Fig. 2d we observed around 2,256 such absorption events, at an average rate of 1.57 s−1 (see the Methods section for details). These led to 175 coincidences, 20 being accidental, such that we deduce an overall ∼7% probability for the transfer of the temporal correlation from photon pairs to ion and photon. The absorption efficiency with which a resonant photon reaching the ion induces a quantum jump is >3×10−4, in agreement with our expectation (see the Methods section).
With the ion optically pumped into the outer Zeeman sub-levels before the interaction, the rate of coincidences between absorption events and trigger photons is controlled by the polarization of the SPDC photons exciting the ion. We varied the polarization of the photons from right-circular to left-circular, thereby selecting excitation of transitions between D5/2 and P3/2 that involve a change of the magnetic moment by Δm=−1 or +1, respectively. Transitions with Δm=0 are suppressed by exciting along the quantization axis. Figure 3 shows the observed dependence for preparation of the ion in one of the two possible initial states, , from which Δm=1 transitions are not possible. The expected sinusoidal variation is found with 90±1% visibility. Such polarization-selective absorption of a single photon is the key to transferring the polarization degree of freedom from the photon to the ion, and is therefore the first step towards mapping photonic quantum information, including photonic entanglement, onto atomic qubits.
We also studied the influence of varying the transmission frequency of the filtering cavities. It should be noted that in this measurement the ion interacts always with the same broadband SPDC photons. Nevertheless, the frequency correlation between the trigger photon detected on the APD and its partner photon that may be absorbed by the ion makes the coincidence probability of these events depend on the filter frequency setting. This is shown in Fig. 4, which shows the coincidence counts, g(2)(τ=0), as a function of the centre frequency of the cavity filters. The two data sets correspond to the two different initial states of the ion, after optical pumping with σ+ or σ− light (see Fig. 2a). Coincidences are observed within the range of frequencies expected from the convolution of filter and transition bandwidth. The two spectra are displaced to higher and lower energies compared with the bare resonance of the D5/2−P3/2 transition. This is a consequence of the energy shift that the magnetic sub-states of the D5/2−P3/2 manifold experience in the applied magnetic field. The measured splitting of 9(2) MHz between the centres of the two spectra is compatible, within the statistical error and some experimental unknowns, with the value of ∼12 MHz expected for the applied magnetic field of 5 G. Like the polarization dependence, the control of the coincidence rate through the frequency of the trigger photons is another manifestation of the transfer of photon properties to the atom required in bidirectional photon–atom interfaces.
Methods
In 30 min we carried out about 25,700 experimental cycles of 70 ms duration each, and measured 3,548 quantum jumps. In each cycle the ion was exposed to SPDC light for 60 ms, while at the same time spontaneously decaying with a lifetime of about 1,110 ms. (This lifetime was experimentally determined and is slightly shorter than the literature value of 1,168 ms (ref. 36), owing to spurious quenching processes.) The combined decay probability of 3,548/25,700=0.138 in 60 ms yields a total decay rate of 2.475 s−1, and hence an SPDC-induced absorption rate (more precisely, rate of D5/2 to P3/2 absorptions that are followed by decay to either S1/2 or D3/2) of 1.574 s−1. Thus, about 2,256 of the measured quantum jumps are attributed to absorption of SPDC photons, and about 1,292 are due to spontaneous decay. Errors are in the few-percent range.
The background of the correlation function (Fig. 2d), of 19.8 events on average in 8 μs time bins, is mainly produced by uncorrelated SPDC photon detections on the APD (that is, heralds with lost partners). APD dark counts of about 30 s−1 and PMT dark counts of about 50 s−1 contribute negligibly to this background.
The transfer efficiency, that is, the probability that an absorption event is accompanied by the detection of a heralding photon, is determined by the losses of the latter, the main contributions being ∼60% fibre coupling efficiency, ∼50% filter transmission and ∼30% detection efficiency of the APD.
For estimating the absorption efficiency, we divided the measured absorption rate of 1.57 s−1 by the approximate rate of 5,000 s−1 fibre-coupled SPDC photons that we send to the ion. The value of 3×10−4 is a lower bound because it does not include loss in the optics between the fibre output and the ion, which is hard to measure. The main contributions to this absorption efficiency are (see also ref. 34): the oscillator strength of the D5/2 to P3/2 transition, of ∼6%, the average Clebsch–Gordon coefficients for Δm=±1 transitions out of the prepared mixture of Zeeman sub-states, ∼50%, the branching ratio for decay of P3/2 to either S1/2 or D3/2, ∼94%, and the fibre-to-ion imaging. For the imaging, which comprises the mode matching from the fibre output to the absorption characteristic of the atom as well as losses in the steering mirrors, the vacuum window and the HALO, this implies a reasonable value of ∼1%.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge support by the European Commission (SCALA, Contract No. 015714; EMALI, MRTN-CT-2006-035369), the Spanish MICINN (QOIT, CSD2006-00019; QLIQS, FIS2005-08257; QNLP, FIS2007-66944; CMMC, FIS2007-29999-E) and the Generalitat de Catalunya (2005SGR00189; FI-AGAUR (C.S.)).
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N.P., F.R., C.S. and M.A. contributed equally to the work. N.P. and A.H. built the photon pair source; F.R., C.S., M.A. and M.H. built the ion trap; N.P., J.H., J.G. and F.D. prepared the experiment and acquired and analysed the data; J.E. planned and supervised the project.
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Piro, N., Rohde, F., Schuck, C. et al. Heralded single-photon absorption by a single atom. Nature Phys 7, 17–20 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1805
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1805
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