Scalable microwave-to-optical transducers at single photon level with spins
Tian Xie, Rikuto Fukumori, Jiahui Li, and Andrei Faraon

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a scalable microwave-to-optical transducer using ytterbium-doped crystals with high nonlinearities, achieving efficient, low-noise conversion at the single-photon level and enabling quantum network integration.
Contribution
It introduces a novel REI-based transducer with high nonlinearity, achieving percent-level efficiency without optical cavities and demonstrating photon interference for scalability.
Findings
Achieved percent-level microwave-to-optical conversion efficiency.
Demonstrated low added noise of approximately 1.24 photons.
Enabled photon interference from two transducers, showing scalability.
Abstract
Microwave-to-optical transduction of single photons will play an essential role in interconnecting future superconducting quantum devices, with applications in distributed quantum computing and secure communications. Various transducers that couple microwave and optical modes via an optical drive have been developed, utilizing nonlinear phenomena such as the Pockels effect and a combination of electromechanical, piezoelectric, and optomechanical couplings. However, the limited strength of these nonlinearities, set by bulk material properties, requires the use of high quality factor resonators, often in conjunction with sophisticated nano-fabrication of suspended structures. Thus, an efficient and scalable transduction technology is still an outstanding goal. Rare-earth ion (REI) doped crystals provide high-quality atomic resonances that result in effective second-order nonlinearities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum optics and atomic interactions · Photonic and Optical Devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
