Darius Bunandar
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Darius Bunandar.
Nature Photonics | 2017
Nicholas C. Harris; Gregory R. Steinbrecher; Mihika Prabhu; Yoav Lahini; Jacob Mower; Darius Bunandar; Changchen Chen; Franco N. C. Wong; Tom Baehr-Jones; Michael Hochberg; Seth Lloyd; Dirk Englund
Environmental noise and disorder play critical roles in quantum particle and wave transport in complex media, including solid-state and biological systems. While separately both effects are known to reduce transport, recent work predicts that in a limited region of parameter space, noise-induced dephasing can counteract localization effects, leading to enhanced quantum transport. Photonic integrated circuits are promising platforms for studying such effects, with a central goal of developing large systems providing low-loss, high-fidelity control over all parameters of the transport problem. Here, we fully map the role of disorder in quantum transport using a nanophotonic processor: a mesh of 88 generalized beamsplitters programmable on microsecond timescales. Over 64,400 experiments we observe distinct transport regimes, including environment-assisted quantum transport and the ‘quantum Goldilocks’ regime in statically disordered discrete-time systems. Low-loss and high-fidelity programmable transformations make this nanophotonic processor a promising platform for many-boson quantum simulation experiments. A large-scale, low-loss and phase-stable programmable nanophotonic processor is fabricated to explore quantum transport phenomena. The signature of environment-assisted quantum transport in discrete-time systems is observed for the first time.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2017
Ya-Qing Bie; Gabriele Grosso; Mikkel Heuck; Marco M. Furchi; Yuan Cao; Jiabao Zheng; Darius Bunandar; Efrén Navarro-Moratalla; Lin Zhou; Dmitri Efetov; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; Jing Kong; Dirk Englund; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero
One of the current challenges in photonics is developing high-speed, power-efficient, chip-integrated optical communications devices to address the interconnects bottleneck in high-speed computing systems. Silicon photonics has emerged as a leading architecture, in part because of the promise that many components, such as waveguides, couplers, interferometers and modulators, could be directly integrated on silicon-based processors. However, light sources and photodetectors present ongoing challenges. Common approaches for light sources include one or few off-chip or wafer-bonded lasers based on III-V materials, but recent system architecture studies show advantages for the use of many directly modulated light sources positioned at the transmitter location. The most advanced photodetectors in the silicon photonic process are based on germanium, but this requires additional germanium growth, which increases the system cost. The emerging two-dimensional transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) offer a path for optical interconnect components that can be integrated with silicon photonics and complementary metal-oxide-semiconductors (CMOS) processing by back-end-of-the-line steps. Here, we demonstrate a silicon waveguide-integrated light source and photodetector based on a p-n junction of bilayer MoTe2, a TMD semiconductor with an infrared bandgap. This state-of-the-art fabrication technology provides new opportunities for integrated optoelectronic systems.
Nanophotonics | 2016
Nicholas C. Harris; Darius Bunandar; Mihir Pant; Greg Steinbrecher; Jacob Mower; Mihika Prabhu; Tom Baehr-Jones; Michael Hochberg; Dirk Englund
Abstract Quantum information science offers inherently more powerful methods for communication, computation, and precision measurement that take advantage of quantum superposition and entanglement. In recent years, theoretical and experimental advances in quantum computing and simulation with photons have spurred great interest in developing large photonic entangled states that challenge today’s classical computers. As experiments have increased in complexity, there has been an increasing need to transition bulk optics experiments to integrated photonics platforms to control more spatial modes with higher fidelity and phase stability. The silicon-on-insulator (SOI) nanophotonics platform offers new possibilities for quantum optics, including the integration of bright, nonclassical light sources, based on the large third-order nonlinearity (χ(3)) of silicon, alongside quantum state manipulation circuits with thousands of optical elements, all on a single phase-stable chip. How large do these photonic systems need to be? Recent theoretical work on Boson Sampling suggests that even the problem of sampling from e30 identical photons, having passed through an interferometer of hundreds of modes, becomes challenging for classical computers. While experiments of this size are still challenging, the SOI platform has the required component density to enable low-loss and programmable interferometers for manipulating hundreds of spatial modes. Here, we discuss the SOI nanophotonics platform for quantum photonic circuits with hundreds-to-thousands of optical elements and the associated challenges. We compare SOI to competing technologies in terms of requirements for quantum optical systems. We review recent results on large-scale quantum state evolution circuits and strategies for realizing high-fidelity heralded gates with imperfect, practical systems. Next, we review recent results on silicon photonics-based photon-pair sources and device architectures, and we discuss a path towards large-scale source integration. Finally, we review monolithic integration strategies for single-photon detectors and their essential role in on-chip feed forward operations.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015
Andy Bohn; William Throwe; François Hébert; Katherine Henriksson; Darius Bunandar; Mark A. Scheel; Nicholas W. Taylor
We present a method of calculating the strong-field gravitational lensing caused by many analytic and numerical spacetimes. We use this procedure to calculate the distortion caused by isolated black holes (BHs) and by numerically evolved BH binaries. We produce both demonstrative images illustrating details of the spatial distortion and realistic images of collections of stars taking both lensing amplification and redshift into account. On large scales the lensing from inspiraling binaries resembles that of single BHs, but on small scales the resulting images show complex and in some cases self-similar structure across different angular scales.
Optics Express | 2017
Jelena Notaros; Jacob Mower; Mikkel Heuck; Cosmo Lupo; Nicholas C. Harris; Gregory R. Steinbrecher; Darius Bunandar; Tom Baehr-Jones; Michael Hochberg; Seth Lloyd; Dirk Englund
We demonstrate a large-scale tunable-coupling ring resonator array, suitable for high-dimensional classical and quantum transforms, in a CMOS-compatible silicon photonics platform. The device consists of a waveguide coupled to 15 ring-based dispersive elements with programmable linewidths and resonance frequencies. The ability to control both quality factor and frequency of each ring provides an unprecedented 30 degrees of freedom in dispersion control on a single spatial channel. This programmable dispersion control system has a range of applications, including mode-locked lasers, quantum key distribution, and photon-pair generation. We also propose a novel application enabled by this circuit - high-speed quantum communications using temporal-mode-based quantum data locking - and discuss the utility of the system for performing the high-dimensional unitary optical transformations necessary for a quantum data locking demonstration.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Darius Bunandar; Zheshen Zhang; Jeffrey H. Shapiro; Dirk Englund
Archive | 2016
Darius Bunandar; Nicholas C. Harris; Dirk Englund
international conference on group iv photonics | 2018
Darius Bunandar; Tomo Lazovich; Michael Gould; Ryan Braid; Carl Ramey; Nicholas C. Harris
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2018
Catherine Lee; Darius Bunandar; Margaret Pavlovich; Matthew E. Grein; Ryan P. Murphy; Scott A. Hamilton; Dirk Englund; P. Ben Dixon
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Anthony L. Lentine; Hong Cai; Christopher M. Long; Nicholas Boynton; Nicholas J. D. Martinez; Christopher T. DeRose; Matthew E. Grein; Douglas C. Trotter; Andrew Starbuck; Andrew Pomerene; Scott A. Hamilton; Paul Davids; Junji Urayama; Dirk Englund; Darius Bunandar; Catherine Lee; Changchen Chen; Ngai C. Wong; Ryan Camacho