Amir Feizpour
University of Oxford
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Publication
Featured researches published by Amir Feizpour.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2016
Patrick M. Ledingham; J. H. D. Munns; S. E. Thomas; Tessa Champion; Cheng Qiu; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Amir Feizpour; Eilon Poem; Ian A. Walmsley; Josh Nunn; Dylan J. Saunders
Quantum memories enable the synchronisation of photonic operations. Raman memories are a promising platform, but are susceptible to four-wave mixing noise. We present a demonstration of a cavity-enhanced Raman memory, showing suppression of four-wave mixing.
Physical Review A | 2017
Joshua Nunn; J. H. D. Munns; S. E. Thomas; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; ChangHua Qiu; Amir Feizpour; Eilon Poem; Benjamin Brecht; Dylan J. Saunders; Patrick M. Ledingham; Dileep V. Reddy; M. G. Raymer; I. A. Walmsley
Quantum memories, capable of storing single photons or other quantum states of light, to be retrieved on demand, offer a route to large-scale quantum information processing with light. A promising class of memories is based on far-off-resonant Raman absorption in ensembles of Λ-type atoms. However, at room temperature these systems exhibit unwanted four-wave mixing, which is prohibitive for applications at the single-photon level. Here, we show how this noise can be suppressed by placing the storage medium inside a moderate-finesse optical cavity, thereby removing the main roadblock hindering this approach to quantum memory.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Greg Dmochowski; Amir Feizpour; Matin Hallaji; Chao Zhuang; Alex Hayat; Aephraim M. Steinberg
We present an experiment using a sample of laser-cooled Rb atoms to show that cross-phase modulation schemes continue to benefit from electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) even as the transparency window is made narrower than the signal bandwidth (i.e., for signal pulses much shorter than the response time of the EIT system). Addressing concerns that narrow EIT windows might not prove useful for such applications, we show that while the peak phase shift saturates in this regime, it does not drop, and the time-integrated effect continues to scale inversely with EIT window width. This integrated phase shift is an important figure of merit for tasks such as the detection of single-photon-induced cross-phase shifts. Only when the window width approaches the systems dephasing rate γ does the peak phase shift begin to decrease, leading to an integrated phase shift that peaks when the window width is equal to 4γ.We present an experiment using a sample of laser-cooled Rb atoms to show that cross-phase modulation schemes continue to benefit from electromagnetically-induced transparency (EIT) even as the transparency window is made narrower than the signal bandwidth (i.e., for signal pulses much shorter than the response time of the EIT system). Addressing concerns that narrow EIT windows might not prove useful for such applications, we show that while the peak phase shift saturates in this regime, it does not drop, and the time-integrated effect continues to scale inversely with EIT window width. This integrated phase shift is an important figure of merit for tasks such as the detection of single-photon-induced cross phase shifts.
New Journal of Physics | 2016
Martin Kiffner; Amir Feizpour; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Dieter Jaksch; Joshua Nunn
We show that cold Rydberg gases enable an efficient six-wave mixing process where terahertz or microwave fields are coherently converted into optical fields and vice versa. This process is made possible by the long lifetime of Rydberg states, the strong coupling of millimeter waves to Rydberg transitions and by a quantum interference effect related to electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). Our frequency conversion scheme applies to a broad spectrum of millimeter waves due to the abundance of transitions within the Rydberg manifold, and we discuss two possible implementations based on focussed terahertz beams and millimeter wave fields confined by a waveguide, respectively. We analyse a realistic example for the interconversion of terahertz and optical fields in rubidium atoms and find that the conversion efficiency can in principle exceed 90%.
New Journal of Physics | 2017
S. E. Thomas; J. H. D. Munns; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Cheng Qiu; Benjamin Brecht; Amir Feizpour; Patrick M. Ledingham; Ian A. Walmsley; Josh Nunn; Dylan J. Saunders
Raman interactions in alkali vapours are used in applications such as atomic clocks, optical signal processing, generation of squeezed light and Raman quantum memories for temporal multiplexing. To achieve a strong interaction the alkali ensemble needs both a large optical depth and a high level of spin-polarisation. We implement a technique known as quenching using a molecular buffer gas which allows near-perfect spin-polarisation of over in caesium vapour at high optical depths of up to a factor of 4 higher than can be achieved without quenching. We use this system to explore efficient light storage with high gain in a GHz bandwidth Raman memory.
Journal of Optics | 2016
J. Boutari; Amir Feizpour; Stefanie Barz; C. Di Franco; M. S. Kim; W. S. Kolthammer; Ian A. Walmsley
We demonstrate a platform for implementing quantum walks that overcomes many of the barriers associated with photonic implementations. We use coupled fiber-optic cavities to implement time-bin encoded walks in an integrated system. We show that this platform can achieve very low losses combined with high-fidelity operations, enabling an unprecedented large number of steps in a passive system, as required for scenarios with multiple walkers. Furthermore the platform is reconfigurable, enabling variation of the coin, and readily extends to multidimensional lattices. We demonstrate variation of the coin bias experimentally for three different values.
Quantum Information and Measurement | 2017
Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Patrick M. Ledingham; Benjamin Brecht; Amir Feizpour; Guillaume S. Thekkadath; S. E. Thomas; J. H. D. Munns; Dylan J. Saunders; Ian A. Walmsley; Joshua Nunn
We implement a low-noise, broadband quantum memory for light via off-resonant two-photon absorption in warm atomic vapour. We store heralded single photons and verify that the retrieved fields are anti-bunched.
european quantum electronics conference | 2017
Patrick M. Ledingham; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Benjamin Brecht; Amir Feizpour; Guillaume S. Thekkadath; S. E. Thomas; J. H. D. Munns; Dylan J. Saunders; Josh Nunn; Ian A. Walmsley
A quantum optical memory (QM) is a device that can store and release quantum states of light on demand. Such a device is capable of synchronising probabilistic events, for example, locally synchronising non-deterministic photon sources for the generation of multi-photon states, or successful quantum gate operations within a quantum computational architecture [1], as well as for globally synchronising the generation of entanglement over long distances within the context of a quantum repeater [2]. Desirable attributes for a QM to be useful for these computational and communicational tasks include high end-to-end transmission (including storage and retrieval efficiency), large storage-time-bandwidth product, room temperature operation for scalability and, of utmost importance, noise free performance for true quantum operation.
Frontiers in Optics | 2016
Ian A. Walmsley; Josh Nunn; Brian J. Smith; W. S. Kolthammer; Dylan J. Saunders; Benjamin J. Metcalf; Stefanie Barz; Jelmer J. Renema; Andreas Eckstein; Patrick M. Ledingham; Amir Feizpour; Eilon Poem; Benjamin Brecht; H. Chrzanowski; Peter C. Humphreys; William R. Clements; K. Kazcmarek; J. H. D. Munns; Cheng Qiu; Michael R. Sprague; James C. Gates; P.G.R. Smith
Hybrid light-matter networks offer the promise for delivering robust quantum information processing technologies, from sensor arrays to quantum simulators. New sources, detectors and memories illustrate progress towards build a resilient, scalable photonic quantum network.
The Rochester Conferences on Coherence and Quantum Optics and the Quantum Information and Measurement meeting (2013), paper M6.68 | 2013
Dylan H. Mahler; James D. Bateman; Lee A. Rozema; Amir Feizpour; Ryo Okamoto; Alex Hayat; Aephraim M. Steinberg
We demonstrate optical super-resolution using a quantum centroid measurement of 2-photon N00N states, using a scalable 11-detector measurement scheme. We will also present the latest results from a 3-photon extension.