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Dive into the research topics where Christian Nölleke is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Nölleke.


Nature | 2012

An elementary quantum network of single atoms in optical cavities

Stephan Ritter; Christian Nölleke; Carolin Hahn; Andreas Reiserer; Andreas Neuzner; Manuel Uphoff; Martin Mücke; Eden Figueroa; J. Bochmann; Gerhard Rempe

Quantum networks are distributed quantum many-body systems with tailored topology and controlled information exchange. They are the backbone of distributed quantum computing architectures and quantum communication. Here we present a prototype of such a quantum network based on single atoms embedded in optical cavities. We show that atom–cavity systems form universal nodes capable of sending, receiving, storing and releasing photonic quantum information. Quantum connectivity between nodes is achieved in the conceptually most fundamental way—by the coherent exchange of a single photon. We demonstrate the faithful transfer of an atomic quantum state and the creation of entanglement between two identical nodes in separate laboratories. The non-local state that is created is manipulated by local quantum bit (qubit) rotation. This efficient cavity-based approach to quantum networking is particularly promising because it offers a clear perspective for scalability, thus paving the way towards large-scale quantum networks and their applications.


Nature | 2011

A single-atom quantum memory

Holger P. Specht; Christian Nölleke; Andreas Reiserer; Manuel Uphoff; Eden Figueroa; Stephan Ritter; Gerhard Rempe

The faithful storage of a quantum bit (qubit) of light is essential for long-distance quantum communication, quantum networking and distributed quantum computing. The required optical quantum memory must be able to receive and recreate the photonic qubit; additionally, it must store an unknown quantum state of light better than any classical device. So far, these two requirements have been met only by ensembles of material particles that store the information in collective excitations. Recent developments, however, have paved the way for an approach in which the information exchange occurs between single quanta of light and matter. This single-particle approach allows the material qubit to be addressed, which has fundamental advantages for realistic implementations. First, it enables a heralding mechanism that signals the successful storage of a photon by means of state detection; this can be used to combat inevitable losses and finite efficiencies. Second, it allows for individual qubit manipulations, opening up avenues for in situ processing of the stored quantum information. Here we demonstrate the most fundamental implementation of such a quantum memory, by mapping arbitrary polarization states of light into and out of a single atom trapped inside an optical cavity. The memory performance is tested with weak coherent pulses and analysed using full quantum process tomography. The average fidelity is measured to be 93%, and low decoherence rates result in qubit coherence times exceeding 180 microseconds. This makes our system a versatile quantum node with excellent prospects for applications in optical quantum gates and quantum repeaters.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Efficient teleportation between remote single-atom quantum memories.

Christian Nölleke; Andreas Neuzner; Andreas Reiserer; Carolin Hahn; Gerhard Rempe; Stephan Ritter

We demonstrate teleportation of quantum bits between two single atoms in distant laboratories. Using a time-resolved photonic Bell-state measurement, we achieve a teleportation fidelity of (88.0 ± 1.5)%, largely determined by our entanglement fidelity. The low photon collection efficiency in free space is overcome by trapping each atom in an optical cavity. The resulting success probability of 0.1% is almost 5 orders of magnitude larger than in previous experiments with remote material qubits. It is mainly limited by photon propagation and detection losses and can be enhanced with a cavity-based deterministic Bell-state measurement.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Ground-State Cooling of a Single Atom at the Center of an Optical Cavity

Andreas Reiserer; Christian Nölleke; Stephan Ritter; Gerhard Rempe

A single neutral atom is trapped in a three-dimensional optical lattice at the center of a high-finesse optical resonator. Using fluorescence imaging and a shiftable standing-wave trap, the atom is deterministically loaded into the maximum of the intracavity field where the atom-cavity coupling is strong. After 5 ms of Raman sideband cooling, the three-dimensional motional ground state is populated with a probability of (89±2)%. Our system is the first to simultaneously achieve quantum control over all degrees of freedom of a single atom: its position and momentum, its internal state, and its coupling to light.


Physical Review A | 2013

Generation of single photons from an atom-cavity system

Martin Mücke; J. Bochmann; Carolin Hahn; Andreas Neuzner; Christian Nölleke; Andreas Reiserer; Gerhard Rempe; Stephan Ritter

A single rubidium atom trapped within a high-finesse optical cavity is an efficient source of single photons. We theoretically and experimentally study single-photon generation using a vacuum stimulated Raman adiabatic passage. We experimentally achieve photon generation efficiencies of up to 34


Scientific Reports | 2015

Room-Temperature Single-photon level Memory for Polarization States

Connor Kupchak; Thomas Mittiga; Bertus Jordaan; Mehdi Namazi; Christian Nölleke; Eden Figueroa

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international quantum electronics conference | 2013

Quantum networks based on single atoms in optical cavities

Stephan Ritter; Christian Nölleke; Carolin Hahn; Andreas Reiserer; Andreas Neuzner; Manuel Uphoff; Martin Mücke; Eden Figueroa; J. Bochmann; Gerhard Rempe

and 56


european quantum electronics conference | 2011

A single-atom optical quantum memory

Andreas Reiserer; Holger P. Specht; Christian Nölleke; Manuel Uphoff; Eden Figueroa; Stephan Ritter; Gerhard Rempe

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International Conference on Quantum Information (2011), paper QWB2 | 2011

A universal single-atom based quantum node

Eden Figueroa; Holger P. Specht; Martin Mücke; Christian Nölleke; J. Bochmann; Andreas Reiserer; Carolin Hahn; Manuel Uphoff; Andreas Neuzner; Stephan Ritter; Gerhard Rempe

on the


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2014

Room-Temperature Quantum Memory for Polarization States

Connor Kupchak; Thomas Mittiga; Bertus Jordaan; Mehdi Namazi; Christian Nölleke; Eden Figueroa

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