# Room temperature caesium quantum memory for quantum information   applications

**Authors:** Patrick Steffen Michelberger

arXiv: 1706.01104 · 2017-06-06

## TL;DR

This paper demonstrates a room temperature caesium vapour quantum memory capable of storing polarisation-encoded and heralded single-photon states, highlighting its potential for scalable quantum networks despite current noise limitations.

## Contribution

It presents a practical implementation of a caesium-based quantum memory operating at room temperature with on-demand storage and detailed noise analysis.

## Key findings

- High polarisation preservation in dual-rail configuration
- Successful storage of heralded single photons
- Memory noise dominated by four-wave-mixing processes

## Abstract

Quantum memories are key components in quantum information networks. Their ability to store and retrieve information on demand makes repeat-until-success strategies scalable. Warm alkali-metal vapours are interesting candidates for the implementation of such memories, thanks to their long storage times and experimental simplicity. Operation with the Raman protocol enables high time-bandwidth products, which allows for multiple synchronisation trials of probabilistically operating quantum gates via memory-based temporal multiplexing. This makes the Raman memory a promising tool, whose broad spectral bandwidth facilitates direct interfacing with other photonic primitives, such as single photon sources. Here, such a light-matter interface is implemented in a warm caesium vapour. Firstly, we study the storage of polarisation-encoded information in the memory. High quality polarisation preservation for bright coherent state input signals can be achieved, when operating the Raman memory in a dual-rail configuration inside a polarisation interferometer. Secondly, heralded single photons are stored in the memory. To this end, the memory is operated on-demand by feed-forward of source heralding events, which is a key technological capability. Prior to storage, single photons are produced in a spontaneous parametric down conversion source, whose bespoke design spectrally tailors the photons to the memory acceptance line. The faithful retrieval of stored single photons is found to be currently limited by noise in the memory, with a signal-to-noise ratio of 0.3 in the memory output. Nevertheless, a clear influence of the input's quantum nature is observed in the retrieved light by measuring signal's photon statistics. Finally, the memory noise processes are examined in detail. Four-wave-mixing noise is determined as the sole important noise source for the Raman memory.

## Full text

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## Figures

63 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.01104/full.md

## References

287 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.01104/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.01104