Quantum communication networks and other quantum information processing will require coherent and efficient transfer of information between light and matter, and the realm of light-matter interfaces is an active area of research. Much of the activity has focused on the mapping of quantum information onto atomic systems (see, for instance, Physics Today, March 2001, page 17). Nicolas Gisin and colleagues at the University of Geneva in Switzerland have now demonstrated the coherent storage and retrieval of information using a solid-state system. The team’s quantum memory was an ensemble of roughly 107 neodymium ions trapped in a crystal of yttrium vanadium oxide (YVO4). In such an environment, the resonant frequencies of the rare-earth atoms are inhomogeneously shifted, which broadens the absorption spectrum. That’s normally undesirable, but the researchers turned it to their advantage. By optically pumping some of the Nd atoms out of the ground state, they sculpted the spectrum into a series of regularly spaced absorption peaks—an “atomic frequency comb.” An incident weak light pulse, with on the order of one photon or less on average, will be uniformly absorbed by the comb and generate a coherent superposition of collective optical excitations, each at a slightly different frequency. The superposition will initially dephase but will get reestablished after a time determined by the comb spacing; once rephased, the atoms will collectively reemit a light pulse that conserves the coherence and phase of the original pulse. Gisin and company achieved storage times of up to a microsecond. Furthermore, they showed that the ensemble can simultaneously store multiple light fields, and they have proposed a means of on-demand retrieval. With such capability, the authors view solid-state systems as a promising contender for quantum storage. (H. de Riedmatten et al., Nature456 , 773, 2008 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature07607 ; M. Afzelius et al., http://arxiv.org/abs/0805.4164.)
An ultracold atomic gas can sync into a single quantum state. Researchers uncovered a speed limit for the process that has implications for quantum computing and the evolution of the early universe.
January 09, 2026 02:51 PM
This Content Appeared In
Volume 62, Number 2
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