A Single-Atom Quantum Memory
Holger P. Specht, Christian N\"olleke, Andreas Reiserer, Manuel, Uphoff, Eden Figueroa, Stephan Ritter, Gerhard Rempe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum memory using a single atom in an optical cavity, achieving high fidelity and long storage times, advancing the development of quantum networks and computing.
Contribution
It introduces a single-atom quantum memory capable of storing and retrieving arbitrary light polarization states with high fidelity and extended coherence times.
Findings
Average fidelity of 93% in state storage and retrieval
Storage times exceeding 180 microseconds
Potential for quantum gates and repeaters
Abstract
The faithful storage of a quantum bit of light is essential for long-distance quantum communication, quantum networking and distributed quantum computing. The required optical quantum memory must, first, be able to receive and recreate the photonic qubit and, second, store an unknown quantum state of light better than any classical device. These two requirements have so far been met only by ensembles of material particles storing the information in collective excitations. Recent developments, however, have paved the way for a new approach in which the information exchange happens between single quanta of light and matter. This single-particle approach allows one to address the material qubit and thus has fundamental advantages for realistic implementations: First, to combat inevitable losses and finite efficiencies, it enables a heralding mechanism that signals the successful storage of…
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