Engineering Long-Lived Collective Dark States in Spin Ensembles
Stefan Putz, Andreas Angerer, Dmitry O. Krimer, Ralph Glattauer,, William J. Munro, Stefan Rotter, J\"org Schmiedmayer, Johannes Majer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how to engineer long-lived dark states in spin ensembles coupled to microwave cavities, significantly reducing decoherence and enabling advanced quantum memory and many-body quantum experiments.
Contribution
The authors introduce a spectral hole burning technique to create long-lived dark states in spin ensembles, surpassing previous limitations on coherence times.
Findings
Long-lived Rabi oscillations with decay rates forty times smaller than the ensemble linewidth.
First realization of a solid-state microwave spin multiplexer with multiple dark states.
Full access to the decoherence-free subspace through spectral hole burning.
Abstract
Ensembles of electron spins in hybrid microwave systems are powerful and versatile components for future quantum technologies. Quantum memories with high storage capacities are one such example which require long-lived states that can be addressed and manipulated coherently within the inhomogeneously broadened ensemble. This broadening is essential for true multimode memories, but induces a considerable spin dephasing and together with dissipation from a cavity interface poses a constraint on the memory's storage time. In this work we show how to overcome both of these limitations through the engineering of long-lived dark states in an ensemble of electron spins hosted by nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond. By burning narrow spectral holes into a spin ensemble strongly coupled to a superconducting microwave cavity, we observe long-lived Rabi oscillations with high visibility and a…
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