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Dive into the research topics where Gilles Nogues is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilles Nogues.


Nature | 1999

Seeing a single photon without destroying it

Gilles Nogues; S. Osnaghi; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

Light detection is usually a destructive process, in that detectors annihilate photons and convert them into electrical signals, making it impossible to see a single photon twice. But this limitation is not fundamental—quantum non-demolition strategies permit repeated measurements of physically observable quantities, yielding identical results. For example, quantum non-demolition measurements of light intensity have been demonstrated, suggesting possibilities for detecting weak forces and gravitational waves. But such experiments, based on nonlinear optics, are sensitive only to macroscopic photon fluxes. The non-destructive measurement of a single photon requires an extremely strong matter–radiation coupling; this can be realized in cavity quantum electrodynamics, where the strength of the interaction between an atom and a photon can overwhelm all dissipative couplings to the environment. Here we report a cavity quantum electrodynamics experiment in which we detect a single photon non-destructively. We use atomic interferometry to measure the phase shift in an atomic wavefunction, caused by a cycle of photon absorption and emission. Our method amounts to a restricted quantum non-demolition measurement which can be applied only to states containing one or zero photons. It may lead to quantum logic gates based on cavity quantum electrodynamics, and multi-atom entanglement.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Entanglement of a mesoscopic field with an atom induced by photon graininess in a cavity

Alexia Auffèves; Paolo Maioli; Tristan Meunier; S. Gleyzes; Gilles Nogues; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

We observe that a mesoscopic field made of several tens of microwave photons exhibits quantum features when interacting with a single Rydberg atom in a high-Q cavity. The field is split into two components whose phases differ by an angle inversely proportional to the square root of the average photon number. The field and the atomic dipole are phase entangled. These manifestations of photon graininess vanish at the classical limit. This experiment opens the way to studies of large quantum state superpositions at the quantum-classical boundary.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2013

Strain-mediated coupling in a quantum dot–mechanical oscillator hybrid system

I. Yeo; Pierre-Louis de Assis; Arnaud Gloppe; Eva Dupont-Ferrier; Pierre Verlot; Nitin S. Malik; Emmanuel Dupuy; Julien Claudon; Jean-Michel Gérard; Alexia Auffèves; Gilles Nogues; Signes Seidelin; Jean-Philippe Poizat; Olivier Arcizet; Maxime Richard

Recent progress in nanotechnology has allowed the fabrication of new hybrid systems in which a single two-level system is coupled to a mechanical nanoresonator. In such systems the quantum nature of a macroscopic degree of freedom can be revealed and manipulated. This opens up appealing perspectives for quantum information technologies, and for the exploration of the quantum-classical boundary. Here we present the experimental realization of a monolithic solid-state hybrid system governed by material strain: a quantum dot is embedded within a nanowire that features discrete mechanical resonances corresponding to flexural vibration modes. Mechanical vibrations result in a time-varying strain field that modulates the quantum dot transition energy. This approach simultaneously offers a large light-extraction efficiency and a large exciton-phonon coupling strength g0. By means of optical and mechanical spectroscopy, we find that g0/2 π is nearly as large as the mechanical frequency, a criterion that defines the ultrastrong coupling regime.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Realization of a superconducting atom chip.

Thomas Nirrengarten; Angie Qarry; Cedric Roux; Andreas Emmert; Gilles Nogues; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

We have trapped rubidium atoms in the magnetic field produced by a superconducting atom chip operated at liquid helium temperatures. Up to 8.2x10(5) atoms are held in a Ioffe-Pritchard trap at a distance of 440 microm from the chip surface, with a temperature of 40 microK. The trap lifetime reaches 115 s at low atomic densities. These results open the way to the exploration of atom-surface interactions and coherent atomic transport in a superconducting environment, whose properties are radically different from normal metals at room temperature.


EPL | 2008

Bose-Einstein condensation on a superconducting atom chip

C. Roux; Andreas Emmert; A. Lupaşcu; T. Nirrengarten; Gilles Nogues; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

We have produced a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) on an atom chip using only superconducting wires in a cryogenic environment. We observe the onset of condensation for 1·104 atoms at a temperature of 100 nK. This result opens the way for studies of atom losses and decoherence in a BEC interacting with a superconducting surface. Studies of dipole-blockade with long-lived Rydberg atoms in a small and dense atomic sample are underway.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Coherence-Preserving Trap Architecture for Long-Term Control of Giant Ryberg Atoms

Philippe Hyafil; John Mozley; Aurelien Perrin; Julien Tailleur; Gilles Nogues; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

We present a way to trap a single Rydberg atom, make it long-lived, and preserve an internal coherence over time scales reaching into the minute range. We propose to trap using carefully designed electric fields, to inhibit the spontaneous emission in a nonresonant conducting structure, and to maintain the internal coherence through a tailoring of the atomic energies using an external microwave field. We thoroughly identify and account for many causes of imperfection in order to verify at each step the realism of our proposal.


Nano Letters | 2016

Observation of a Biexciton Wigner Molecule by Fractional Optical Aharonov-Bohm Oscillations in a Single Quantum Ring.

Hee Dae Kim; Rin Okuyama; Kwangseuk Kyhm; Mikio Eto; Robert A. Taylor; A. A. L. Nicolet; M. Potemski; Gilles Nogues; Le Si Dang; Ku Chul Je; Jongsu Kim; Ji Hoon Kyhm; Kyu Hyoek Yoen; Eun Hye Lee; Jun Young Kim; Il Ki Han; Won-Jun Choi; J. D. Song

The Aharonov-Bohm effect in ring structures in the presence of electronic correlation and disorder is an open issue. We report novel oscillations of a strongly correlated exciton pair, similar to a Wigner molecule, in a single nanoquantum ring, where the emission energy changes abruptly at the transition magnetic field with a fractional oscillation period compared to that of the exciton, a so-called fractional optical Aharonov-Bohm oscillation. We have also observed modulated optical Aharonov-Bohm oscillations of an electron-hole pair and an anticrossing of the photoluminescence spectrum at the transition magnetic field, which are associated with disorder effects such as localization, built-in electric field, and impurities.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Asymmetry of localised states in a single quantum ring: Polarization dependence of excitons and biexcitons

Heedae Kim; Kwangseuk Kyhm; Robert A. Taylor; Gilles Nogues; Ku Chul Je; Eun Hye Lee; J. D. Song

We performed spectroscopic studies of a single GaAs quantum ring with an anisotropy in the rim height. The presence of an asymmetric localised state was suggested by the adiabatic potential. The asymmetry was investigated in terms of the polarization dependence of excitons and biexcitons, where a large energy difference (∼0.8 meV) in the exciton emission energy for perpendicular polarizations was observed and the oscillator strengths were also compared using the photoluminescence decay rate. For perpendicular polarizations, the biexciton exhibits twice the energy difference seen for the exciton, a fact that may be attributed to a possible change in the selection rules for the lowered symmetry.


European Physical Journal D | 2005

Trapping and coherent manipulation of a Rydberg atom on a microfabricated device: a proposal

John Mozley; Philippe Hyafil; Gilles Nogues; M. Brune; J. M. Raimond; S. Haroche

Abstract.We propose to apply atom-chip techniques to the trapping of a single atom in a circular Rydberg state. The small size of microfabricated structures will allow for trap geometries with microwave cut-off frequencies high enough to inhibit the spontaneous emission of the Rydberg atom, paving the way to complete control of both external and internal degrees of freedom over very long times. Trapping is achieved using carefully designed electric fields, created by a simple pattern of electrodes. We show that it is possible to excite, and then trap, one and only one Rydberg atom from a cloud of ground state atoms confined on a magnetic atom chip, itself integrated with the Rydberg trap. Distinct internal states of the atom are simultaneously trapped, providing us with a two-level system extremely attractive for atom-surface and atom-atom interaction studies. We describe a method for reducing by three orders of magnitude dephasing due to Stark shifts, induced by the trapping field, of the internal transition frequency. This allows for, in combination with spin-echo techniques, maintenance of an internal coherence over times in the second range. This method operates via a controlled light shift rendering the two internal states’ Stark shifts almost identical. We thoroughly identify and account for sources of imperfection in order to verify at each step the realism of our proposal.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Optical properties of single ZnTe nanowires grown at low temperature

A. Artioli; P. Rueda-Fonseca; P. Stepanov; E. Bellet-Amalric; M. Den Hertog; Catherine Bougerol; Y. Genuist; Fabrice Donatini; R. André; Gilles Nogues; K. Kheng; S. Tatarenko; D. Ferrand; J. Cibert

Optically active gold-catalyzed ZnTe nanowires have been grown by molecular beam epitaxy, on a ZnTe(111) buffer layer, at low temperature 350°C under Te rich conditions, and at ultra-low density (from 1 to 5 nanowires per micrometer²). The crystalline structure is zinc blende as identified by transmission electron microscopy. All nanowires are tapered and the majority of them are oriented. Low temperature micro-photoluminescence and cathodoluminescence experiments have been performed on single nanowires. We observe a narrow emission line with a blue-shift of 2 or 3 meV with respect to the exciton energy in bulk ZnTe. This shift is attributed to the strain induced by a 5 nm-thick oxide layer covering the nanowires, and this assumption is supported by a quantitative estimation of the strain in the nanowires.

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Alexia Auffèves

École Normale Supérieure

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Patrice Bertet

École Normale Supérieure

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S. Gleyzes

École Normale Supérieure

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S. Osnaghi

École Normale Supérieure

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Tristan Meunier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Andreas Emmert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mathieu Jeannin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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K. Kheng

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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