Deterministic photon-emitter coupling in chiral photonic circuits
Immo S\"ollner, Sahand Mahmoodian, Sofie Lindskov Hansen, Leonardo, Midolo, Alisa Javadi, Gabija Kir\v{s}ansk\.e, Tommaso Pregnolato, Haitham, El-Ella, Eun Hye Lee, Jin Dong Song, S{\o}ren Stobbe, and Peter Lodahl

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the internal state of a quantum emitter can deterministically control highly directional single-photon emission in a chiral photonic crystal waveguide, enabling advanced quantum photonic devices.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental demonstration of state-controlled, highly directional photon emission in a chiral nanophotonic waveguide, paving the way for scalable quantum photonic circuits.
Findings
Over 90% photon emission directionality achieved.
Practical realization of on-chip optical diodes and circulators.
Proposal for a scalable deterministic photon-photon CNOT gate.
Abstract
The ability to engineer photon emission and photon scattering is at the heart of modern photonics applications ranging from light harvesting, through novel compact light sources, to quantum-information processing based on single photons. Nanophotonic waveguides are particularly well suited for such applications since they confine photon propagation to a 1D geometry thereby increasing the interaction between light and matter. Adding chiral functionalities to nanophotonic waveguides lead to new opportunities enabling integrated and robust quantum-photonic devices or the observation of novel topological photonic states. In a regular waveguide, a quantum emitter radiates photons in either of two directions, and photon emission and absorption are reverse processes. This symmetry is violated in nanophotonic structures where a non-transversal local electric field implies that both photon…
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